This item is only available as the following downloads:

rnrimr rWM,kin IBM
OewislLi Flor idiaii
Combining THE JEWISH UNITY and THE JEWISH WEEKLY
,'olume 39 Number 48
Miami, Florida. Friday. December 9, 1966
Four Sections Price 25c
Kosygin Vows to Ease
Emigration of Jews
PARIS (JTA) Soviet Prem-
ier Alexci Kosygin said here last
weeekend at a press conference
that "we will do everything to en-
able" reunification of Jewish fam-
ilies in the Soviet Union with
members living in other countries.
In what was believed to be his
first statement on the problem as
Premier, Mr. Kosygin, who is now
in Paris on a state visit, made the
statement in reply to a question
by one of the newsmen. He was
asked whether the Soviet Union
would give permission to Jews in
Russia to join their families in
other countries. He coupled his
reply with a denial of anti-Semit-
ism in the Soviet Union.
He also said in rtply to an-
other question that a Soviet-
sponsored peace conference in
the Middle East was not possible
because the "belligerents" did
not want it. In reply to the ques-
tion about permitting the re-
unification of Jewish families,
the Soviet Premier said:
"Hans people in the world have
already raised this question. Some
are speaking about anti-Semitism
in the Soviet Union. Others speak
about reunification of Jewish fam-
ilies. I have to say to you that
there is no anti-Semitism in th6
Soviet Union. That is pure imag-
ination and not a very brilliant
way of struggle against the Soviet
Union. That is not serious.
"Concerning the problem of
families and their reunification,
we will do everything to enable
this. We will make it easy; we "ill
open the road for those who want
to leave. There is no problem
Continued on Page 12-A
To Gary Waterman 11, of Dallas, and Judy Sasson 14, of New
Haven, the Chanuka lights symbolize hope for normal lives
oeing realized at the Jewish National Home for Asthmatic
Children at Denver. A two-year program of rehabilitation,
costing S12.000, is free to families of the 165 young patients.
Youngsters receive reliqious training under the supervision
of director of religious education, Rabbi Chaim Davidovich.
Mrs. Sidney Ritterman, 932 15th St., Miami Beach, is pres-
ident of the INHC Council of Auxiliaries here. Chanuka
opened with the lighting of the first candle Wednesday eve.
Jordan is Still Seen as Key To
Middle East Peace as Riots Abate
i
Wallace Studies Lead
Of Third Party Ticket
By ROBERT SEGAL
One of the most ominous rum-
bles to come out of the 1966 elec-
tions is the optimistic clucking
t'oing on in the camp of Gov.
George C. Wallace, of Alabama.
While Lurleen Wallace is minding
;he mansion as Governess these
next two years, the energetic Mr.
Wallace will undoubtedly be scur-
rying about the country trying to
organize a tough and vibrant Third
Party Presidential Ticket for 1968.
Gov. Wallace has a lot going
for him. He has the juicy recol-
lection of grabbing off 44 per cent
of Maryland's voters, 34 per cent
of Wisconsin's voters and 30 per
cent of Indiana's voters in his trial
run in the 1964 Presidential con
test. To achieve such a record, he
Continued on Page 9-A
Eban Worried About
Neo-Nazi Successes
JERUSALEM -- (JTA) -- Con-1 Democratic Union and the Social
Democrats, which "are undoubted-
ly democratic."
tern over the reemergence of a
neo-Nazi party in West Germany
vas expressed this week in Parlia-
nent by Foreign Minister Abba
Khan, who said that the Jewish
.eople were particularly sensitive
:o any sign reminding it about
the terrible Nazi past. It was fit-
ting, therefore, he added, that the
Knesset should be the first Parlia
meat of the world to express con-
cern about the electoral successes
of the National Democratic Party
.n two West German states last
month.
The Foreign Minister added a
warning against the danger of ex-
aggerating what had happened in
Hesse and Bavaria where the
NDP, which has officially been
described as neo-Nazi by the West
German Foreign Ministry, won
-eats for the first time. He said
that even in those two states, more
than 90 percent of the population
still supported West Germany's
two major parties, the Christian
Eban declared that anyone
Continued on Page 15-A

TEL AVIV (JTA) Jordan
remained the key this week to
peace in the Middle East as riot-
ing by Palestinian Arabs on the
Jordan West Bank over the Israeli
Samua raid diminished.
A Jordanian police station
which was one of the targets of
that raid was the source of shoot-
ing this week at Israeli workers
south of the Hebron mountain.
Jordanians in the Rujum El Mad-
fa police station began shooting
at workers well within Israeli ter-
ritory. Members of an anned es-
cort returned the fire. The ex-
change was brief and no casualties
were reported. Israel lodged a
complaint with the Jordanian-
Israel Mixed Arms Commission.
King Hussein of Jordan mad*
a number of statement* during
the week indicating that he con-
sidered his Arab neighbors and
the Soviet Union hardly less of
a threat than Israel. In an inter-
view with Associated Press, he
said the Jordanian Army would
- strike back at Israel "extremely
hard" on any future reprisal
raid. At the same time, he
charged the Soviet Union with
whipping up tensions in the
Middle East in a drive for con-
trol of the oil-rich region and
that Communists had exploited
Continued on Page 9-A
* *
TENSION DELIBERATELY AVOIDED
2 Egyptian Jets Downed;
Nasser Silent on Losses
THANT LISTS BORDER SAFETY FACTORS PAGE 7-A
JERUSALEM (JTA) Israeli
observers said that while Egypt
has considerably increased air pa-
trols along the Israeli border and
over Sinai, President Nasser's re-
gime apparently did not intend to
make an issue over the shooting
down of two Soviet-made MIG-19
jets by an Israeli jet pilot.
The observers said that if Egypt
wanted to build up tension, it
would have played up the incident
in a typical "victory" communique.
So far, however, Cairo Radio has
made no reference to the air clash
in its broadcasts, reporting only
that two of its planes had been ac-
cidentally downed. This treatment
was considered evidence that
Egypt wants to close the incident.
The Israeli military jet pilot
shot down the two Egyptian jets
in a brief dogfight over Israeli
territory, in which a Matra air-
to-air missile was used for the
first time. Capt. A. Michael
brought down one of the Soviet-
made jets with the missile and
the other with a salvo from hie
cannons. The victory was the
first time that Israeli fighters
had defeated a MIG-19 and the
first Israeli-Egyptian air clash
since 1961 when Israeli pilots
shot down a MIG-17.
The battle, which lasted about
two minutes at 15,000 feet, near
Nitzana, began when two MIGs
went after a Piper scouting plane
flying a routine reconnaisance
mission. Israeli radar picked up
the MIGs and orders were sent to
an Air Force base. Two Israeli
Mirage jets rose to intercept the
MIGs. Initially, two MIG-17 jets
entered Israeli territory in pursuit
of the Piper which went into evas-
Continued on Page 2-A
DEMAND END TO EXTORTION'
Extremists Issue Manifesto
BONN (JTA) A 12-point manifesto
issued by the extremist National Democratic
Party disclosed that the party wants an end to
the Nazi war crimes trials and to West German
compensation payments to victims of the Nazi
period.
The NDP, which shocked world opinion by
winning Parliamentary seats for the first time
last month in elections in Hesse and Bavaria,
has never issued a detailed program, only the
manifesto.
Point nine of the manifesto reads: "Twenty
years after the war, we demand an end to one-
sided trials which aim at wiping out the past,
while in other countries millions of war crimes
against German men, women and children go
unpunished."
Continued on Page 13-A
CHANCtUOR KIMNGtB
danger in exaggeration

Page 2-A
+J(**ist' flcridian
Friday, December 9, 1966
John Knight Gets Roosevelt Award BsfiHHjg
CHANUKA FESTIVAL PAGE 10-A
TEMPtE BETH AfM SEC B
TEMPIE NEK TANRD ... SEC. B
Sam Blank. busifTeS"^in# civic
leader, will serve as chairman of
the patron hosts for the annual
Ambassador's Ball to be held Mon-
day evening, Dec 26. at the Fon-
tainebleau Hotel.
It will be at this occasion that
the Eleanor Roosevelt-Israel Hu-
manities Award will be presented
to John S. Knight, publisher of
the Miami Herald and other
Knight newspapers.
Blank indicated that a roster of
leading citizen from across the
nation, representing many areas
of communal life will serve on the
committee.
The award will be conferred
upon Knight "for dedication to
tn* causa of human freedom and
uneFerstanding in the spirit of
Eleanor Roosevelt."
MUM S. KNfCtfT
The presentation v. ill be made
by Avraham Harman. Israel's Am-
bassador to the United States
Previous recipients of the Elea-
nor Roosevelt Israel Humanities
Award include Archibald McLeish.
Marion Anderson and Justice Wll-I
liam O. Douglas. Last honoree was.
Dr. Henry King Stanford, presi-;
dent of the University of Miami.
Announcement of the award
tnovtoa that '"Eleanor Roosevelt is'
the epitome of the good in man
making possible such miracles as'
the rebirth of Israel. To perpetu-
ate the values which have made
this woman an immortal in her
own lifetime, the Eleanor Roose-
velt Humanities Award has been |
conceived. A select coterie of de-
dicated citizens whose devotion
and service have been a strength
and inspiration to their fellow-
man, have been named as stand-
ard bearers of this great tradition.
"In the year 1966, corresponding
with Israel's 18th year of state-
hood, the name of John Shively
Two Egyptian Jets are Shot Down
Continued from Pago 1-A A few minutes later, two other
ive aetion and disappeared without MIG\ this ,ime ,he more ad;
being seen by the Egyptian pilots
The first two MIGs then returned
to Egyptian territory.
vanced MIG 18s, flew over Israeli
territory in a straight line from
Sinai, apparently also searching
VENETIAN RAMBLER
AU-WOW
New 1967!
Only *1677
DOWN MAT.
21.77
WITH $200.00 TRADE
TERMS TO SUIT ANYONE
24 MONTHS AT
$67.77
. EXTRA KOVIS .
LAST 12 MONTHS AT $58.77
INCLUDES ALU
SALES TAX, LICENSE PLATES,
INSURANCE, INTEREST AND
FULL FACTORY EQUIPMENT
Always 100 Fine Used Cars Available
VENETIAN RAMBLER
545 N.E. 15th STREET
FR 7-8831
for the Piper Cub. When the
Egyptian pilots sighted the Mirage
jets they tried to run off but the
26-year-old Israeli captain moved
in too quickly.
Dascribinf the encounter,
Capt. Michael said that whan ha
received the order to attack, ha
fired his air-to-air missile at leu
than a mile distance. Ha said ha
saw tha missile hit the MIG
which axplodad into "a mush-
roam of flame."
Capt. Michael then maneuvered
toward the second MIG, which was
engaged in evasive action, and hit
the MIG with a cannon salvo. It
crashed into Egyptian territory
near the border, the captain said.
For an hour after the clash, MG 21
Jets patrolled near the border but
stayed away from Israeli territory.
The Matra missile is standard
equipment on French, Australian,
South African, Swiss and Israeli
aircraft, but it has not been used
before against live targets.
YOU CAN MAKE ISRAEL
ECONOMICALLY STRONG!
BUY A SAFE ISRAEL BONO.
GIVE TO THE CJA.
To* fh** hart ami to lumtl.
MAVSHIE FRIED8EHG
AUTOLOANS
4 V
s
CAR DEFT.
OPEN'TIL 5 PM
$4.S5 PER $100 PER YEAR
24 Hr. Sriea
JE 2-6451
JEFFERSON NATIONAL BANK
MMSiitn tawtCNntrMNi OF MIAMI BEACH
EACH SIDE Of JULIA TUTUE CAUSEWAY MEMBER F.O.I.C.
PRESCRIPTION OPTICIANS
FASHION CENTER OF THE SOUTH
Largest Selection In Latest Styles
for Men ana Wemen
FREE PARKING SPACE IN
REAR CONVENIENT TO BUSES
728 LINCOLN ROAD
(On the Mall)
Phone JE 8-0749
Oculists' Prescriptions Fitted
CONTACT LENSES
Vf vm yn ma
Rabbi Joseph E. Rackovsky
Pfcaoe JE 1 3595
?45 MICHIGAN AVE., MIAMI BEACH
ATTENTION!
Jewish Home for the Aged
THRIFT SHOP
NEEDS YOUR DONATION
NOW!
"FURNITUtE'-'APPUANCES"
"Cl6THING"-"JEWElRY," etc.
"All Items Tax Deductible"
CALL 696-2101
Knight, courageous man of letters,
humanitarian and champion of Is-
rael nlwimmili be added to the
roster of those selected for this
high honor."
The Ambassadors Ball, held an
nually under the patronage of the i
Ambassador of Israel and the (;<>
oi nor of Florida, is sponsored by;
the Greater Miami Israel Bond or
gahization.
Knight's record of service in-
cludes tha Presidency of the
American Society of Newspaper
Editors, chairmanship of tha Na-
tional Conference of Christians
and Jaws, presidency of the In-
ter-American Press Association
His numerous honors include the
University of Missouri Honor
Award, HMO; La Prensa Award,;
Rio de Janiero, 1954; Brotherhood!
of Children Award, 1946; Amer
icas Foundation Award, 1959: i
Maria Moors Cabot gold medal.:
Columbia University, 1962; arkh
Doctor of Laws degree from the1
Miami Hebrew Book Store
ISRAELI A DOMESTIC Oictj
Hebrew Religious Supplies tor
Synagogue!, Schools & Private ui
1585 Washington Ae.
Miami teach JE 8-3840
REPHUN'S HEBREW
BOOK STORE
Greater Miami's largest ft Oldest
Supply Hoes* fer Synagogues,
Hebrew ft Sunday Schooii.
Wholesale ft tefail
UKAtU SIFTS AND NOVEITIES
417 Woshington Avt. JE 1-9017
AMERICAN ISRAELI
A RELIGIOUS STORE *
All Beligioai Articles V
Far Synagogues
Schools Homes
1357 WASHINCTOH Aft.
11 I-772J f, Schwort,

Irvin W. Katz, M. Ed.
Educational Consultant
APTITUDE TESTING
CAREER GUIDANCE
COLLEGE ADMISSIONS COUNSELING
SCHOOL SELECTION AND PLACEMENT
By Appointment
407 Lincoln Road
532-3541
Riverside
exists to serve.
For more than three generations. Jewish families in the
New York Metropolitan and Miami areas have contin-
ued to entrust their funeral arrangements to Riverside.
They know that no matter which Riverside Chapel
makes these arrangements, standards of service are con-
sistently excellent because Riversidewhich owns, op-
erates and directly supervises each Riverside Chapel
knows that its very existence depends on superior
service.
Perhaps that is the reason why over eighty per cent of
the funerals conducted at Riverside are for families we
have served before. We are proud to have earned the
confidence of the Jewish community.
RIVERSIDE
MEMORIAL CHAPEL. INC FUNERAL DIRECTORS
19th and Alton Road: in the heart of Miami Beach
1250 Normandy Drive: fifteen minutes from Hollywood
JE 1-1151
In Miami: Douglas Road at S.W. 17th Street
In North Miami Beach: 1GG60 N.E. 19th Avenue
Manhattan
Brooklyn Bronx Westchester Far RoCKAWAV
To arrange a funeral anywhere
in the United States,
call the nearest Riverside Chapel.

Friday, December 9, 1966
+Jmlsii fhrid/ati
Page 3-A
MERCANTILE DIVISION INITIATES CAMPAIGN
CJA Unit Appoints Quartet
CAMPAIGN LEADERS PAGE 5-A
The Home Furnishing Group of
the 1967 Combined Jewish Ap-
peal's Mercantile Division has be-
gun to initiate campaign plans for
the forthcoming CJA drive.
Maxwell H. Weisblatt, division
merchandise manager of Jordan
Marsh Co., and Hyman Lipzin, vice
president of Richards Department
Stores, nave assumed the co-chair-
manhip of the Home Furnishings
Group. This marks the fourth con-
secutive year in which Weisblatt
and Lipi.in will share responsibility
for the group's campaign. Weis-
blatt has also served as chairman
of the Furniture Division for the
United Fund of Dade County.
Special gifts chairman for the
Home Furnishings Group is Men-
dell M. Selig. A member of the
executive committee and board
of governors of the Greater Mi-
ami Jewish Federation, Selig
has served as co-chairman of the
cash committee and a member
of the budget committee for Fed-
eration.
Selig ll a board member of the
Bureau of Jewish Education, a
beneficiary agency of Federation,
and is also a member of the ad-
visory board of the University of
Miami. He is a vice president of
Beth David Congregation and re-
I
Maxwell Weisblatt Hyman Lipzin
Selig is chairman of the board
of the Selig Manufacturing Co.
in Massachusetts.
Honorary chairmanship of the
Home Furnishing Group has been
awarded to A. J. Alexander, pres-
ident of Kent Furniture Co., Inc.
Alexander, who serves on the
board of governors of the Greater
Miami Jewish Federation, was
honorary chairman of the Home
Furnishings Group during last
year's CJA campaign and served
as chairman of the group for five
years prior to 1966.
He has also volunteered his
services as chairman of the Fur-
niture Division of the United
Fund of Dade County. Alexander
is a past president and director
of the Florida Furniture Manu-
facturers' Asociation and presi-
dent of the Florida Furniture
Mart.
On Tuesday, at 7:30 p.m.. the
four chairmen gathered for their
first committee meeting of the
year. Purpose of the meeting was
to establish plans for the Home
Furnishing Group's annual Initial
Gifts meeting.
A. I, Alexander hieniell Selig
Last year, the Home Furnishing
Group raised some $28,000 during,
cipient of the National Community | the Combined Jewish Appeal |
Service Award of the Jewish The- i campaign, leading the other four
ological Seminary. groups of the Mercantile Division.
surprise
is the ingredient that makes giving pres-
ents as much fun as receiving them.
Would you be surprised to know that a
year's supply of shaving can be a very
f thoughtful gift? The razor blades, of
course, cannot be just the ordinary kind!
SHALOM double edge razor blades
feature all the latest developments of
their widely advertised competitors, like
SUPER stainless extra fine steel and
polymer coating for smooth, long lasting
shaving pleasure, at popular prices.
Here's another surprise ... they're made
in Israel!
Surprise someone you care for with a
year's supply of shaving pleasure! (Only
30 blades for the average shaver.)
If the man where you buy your razor
blades does not have SHALOM blades,
ask him to get some. You'll be giving
someone year 'round shaving pleasure
and helping a new nation help itself.
Arabs Decline Nobel Invitations
i
STOCKHOLM (JTA) The
ambassadors of Iraq, Morocco, Pak-
istan ar.d Tunisia notified the
Swedish Academy this week they
were declining invitations- to at-
tend the presentation on Saturday
of Nobel prizes and the banquet
held as part of the presentation
ceremonies because the presenta-
tions have "political tendencies."
The rejections were stimulated
by the fact that the Nobel Prize
for Literature was awarded this
year to two Jewish writers, S. Y.
Agnon of Israel and Nelly Sachs
of Sweden, specifically for the
Jewish content of their works.
Officials here said that the re-
jection marked the first time that
foreign envoys have declined in-
vitations to a ceremony considered |
the social and cultural event of
the year in Europe.
The rejection by the Tunisian
envoy caused surprise because
Tunisia has not in recent years
followed the Arab League stands
toward Israel.
I
SHAWM
SUPER STAINLESS STEEL BLADES
| Distributed by SHEFFIELD RAZOR BLADES LTD 527 West 34th St.. New York 10001
niiiKiiinniHUHinuttHtnn*n*niiifnitiMMminninitittTfliB
SIDNEY S. KRAEMER
ASK THE MAN FROM
EQUITABLE ABOUT THE
PLANNED SECURITY POLICY!
Find out how you can get a
comprehensive life insur-
ance program in one policy.
A policy that provides for
your family, if you die:
1. Lump sum cash payment
for beneficiary. 2. Monthly
income while children are
growing up. For you, if you
live: 3. Cash for your own
retirement.
Planned Security com-
bines permanent life insur-
ance with term insurance.
The permanent life insur-
ance builds cash values and
helps you save. The decreas-
ing term insurance provides
extra protection when your
family needs it most. All at
an unchanging, low pre-
mium.
To get the complete story
on Planned Security, call The
Man from Equitable.
DIAL 371-5691
EVES. 866-1875
Ask for
SIDNEY S.
KRAEMER
100 BISCAYNE BLVD.
She EQUITABLE life Assurance
\6ociety of the United States
Horn* Office New York, N.V.
Beth Am Students
Meet with Rabbi
The Post-Confirmation Club of
Temple Beth Am has been invited
to a breakfast meeting at the home
of Rabbi and Mrs. Herbert M.
Baumgard on Sunday at 10:30 a.m.
Composed of 11th and 12th grade
students who have been confirmed,
the group is studying, "Conse-
crated Unto Me."
Shrinks Piles
Without Surgery
Stops Itch-Relieves Pain
NewYork,N.Y.(Special)-Forthe
first time science has found a new
healing substance with the aston-
ishing ability to shrink hemor-
rhoids, stop rectal itch and to
relieve pain-without surgery.
In case after case, while gently
relieving pain, actual reduction
(shrinkage) took place.
Most amazing of all-results
were so thorough that sufferers
made astonishing statements
like "Piles have ceased to be a
problem!"
The secret is a new healing sub-
stance (Bio-Dyne*) -discovery
of a famous research institute.
This substance is now available
in Kiipponiloru or ointment form
under the name I'reparation H.
ATTENTION!
Jewish Home for the Aged
THRIFT SHOP
NEEDS YOUR DONATION
NOW!
"FURNITURE"-"APPUANCES"
"ClOTHING"-"JEWfLRY," etc.
"All Items Tax Deduct,ble"
CALL 696-2101
I .Al..l^
Max Lewis
at FR 7-0401 or PL 1-7503
for a good buy on a fine
PIANO, ORGAN,
ORCHESTRA INSTRUMENT,
or
SCOTT STEREO CONSOLE
Exetunive
MUstributorH for:
PIANOS
ORGANS

Fcg4-A
vJewisti ncrktlan
Friday, December 9.
1966
Jewish Floridian
CFFICE and PLANT 120 N.E. Sixth Street
Telephone FR 3-4605
Teletype Communications Miami TWX
305-696-4869
FFSD K. SHOCHET-,.....-. Editor and Publisher
LBO MINDLIN .......................... Executive Editor
SUMA M. THOMPSON .... Asst. to Publisher
- Jewish Floridian does not guarantee the Kashruth
of the merchandise advertised in its column*.
I'libiisln-d every Friday since 1927 by The Jewish Kloridlan
al IN N.E. Sixth Street. Miami 1. Piorldn.
So, ..ml-Class Postage Paid at Miami. Florida.
The Jewish Floridian has absorbed the Jewish Unity and
the Jewish Weekly. Member of the ewish Telegraphic
Agency. Seven Arts Feature Syndicate. Worldwide News
Service. National Editorial Assn.. American Assn. of
English-Jewish Newspapers, and the Florida Press Assn.
d
MM ii..'.' OHM
s u BSCR 1 P T Local 1 O N Area RATE S :
One Vear $5.00 Three Year! $12.00
Out of Town Jpon Request
Chanuka Celebration
For All of Us to Enjoy
Chanuka, like Passovei, is a
:.'..'. d-centered holiday. There are
c::.s. There is the dreidel, with the
Nun (nessi, Gimel (gadol). Hay
haya)i shin (shum) engraved on it.
reminding our young people that
the Festival cf the Lights is all about
c great miracle. There are the gus-
. ory goodies potato pancakes,
cr.d the like.
But like any other Jewish holi-
day, Chanuka has a story and a
r _rpose. Furthermore, it is a symbol.
" s an expression of our history, a
crmmentary on our tradition, and
a promise of the continuation of
z a culture.
Chanuka tells us about the Jew-
.:. clash with the Graeco-Syrians
: :.d the triumph of the Maccabees,
who brought the Jews out from un-
der the thumb of Hellenistic attempts
c: their oppression. It tells us about
the cleansing of the temple of idols
cr.d the rededication of the temple
^z ihe Jewish way of fife.
Hence the name of the holiday,
O.anuka, which suggests dedication an in-
cuguxation of a new experience.
Apart from the history, itself, Chanuka sym-
zz.izes one of man's earliest battles waged
:r. the name of religious freedom. Refusing to
hew to their oppressors and idolatry, the Mac-
ccbees and the Jews rose up to defeat the
er.emy and to preserve the integrity of their
tradition.
This would be miracle enough, but the
eicht-day's burning of the dedicatory oil, which
was in reality a quantity merely sufficient to
bun for a single day, added to the intensity
c: the first Chanuka occasion and to the sig-
nificance of the Maccabee triumph. Religious
freedom, as a concept of total human freedom,
in effect received divine sanction.
From all points of view, the child's and our
Own. the eiaht-day-long Festival of Chanuka
:s a celebration to enjoy.
-*n
both sides, we do not show our neutrality. We
merely feed fodder to nervousness. Until our
government really insists upon talking peace
and meaning it, rather than talking while arm-
ing the participants, there will be no peace.
There will only be more power politics.
More Power Politics
It is patently impossible at this point to pre-
dict the immediate future in the Middle East.
AH parties involved, Israeli and Arab, are more
r.ervous than ever. The slightest infraction may
bring retaliation; and retaliation may mean
general war.
What is needed is an enforced consensus
cmong the Arabs that Israel is here to stay.
If the western powers, and particularly the
United States, believe this, then it should not be
too difficult to tell the Arabs that American
policy is dedicated to the recognition of Israel's
national integrity.
It would be much better to say so than to
sit on the fence as we have before. For fence-
straddling is precisely what Washington has
done since the Truman years; and it has not
brought peace since the armistice signed on
the Island of Rhodes. It would be much better
to be honest than to be fearful about the nexf
Soviet move.
For honesty and integrity can not depend
upon the gross, frequently illogical, and most
often jaundiced, contradictory and even im-
moral character of power politics. And power
politics is what seems to be governing our
stance in the Middle East today, not a genuine
concern either for Israel or for the Arabs.
This is why Washington released 36 F104
jetfighters to Jordan last week. This is why
Washington is continuing to process pending
arms sales to Israel, including the preparation
fcr shipment of light jet bombers. In arming
An Apt Budgetary Warning
In assessing the results of the recent Gen-
eral Assembly of the Council of Jewish Federa-
tions and Welfare Funds in Los Angeles, Philip
Bernstein, executive director, made a number
oi interesting points.
Among them, Mr. Bernstein noted that the
organized Jewish community must be careful
about accepting the increasing amount of gov-
ernment funds available for dealing with un-
met community needs. Selectivity was the key-
note of the CJFWF director's warning.
Increased government funds can help us
to explore new areas in which voluntary
agencies will be able to make specialized con-
tributions, he noted. But. on the other hand, an
across-the-board submission to the easy avail-
ability may very well attenuate equally spec-
ialized Jewish purposes.
We can understand how and why anv phil-
anthropic agency would be disposed toward
taking what is loosely, and perhaps unfairly,
called a "government handout." Today's in-
flationary trend does not quickly motivate con-
tributors to raise their gifts in order to balance
the depleting effect en their giving. The conse-
guence is that the same number of dollars as
last year will buy fewer and more inadequate
services next year.
Agencies worried about this turn uneasy
eyes toward government assistance. But the
nature of government assistance is such that
it must ultimately compromise the sectarian
view it must weaken the authoritv Jewish
federations and, indeed, any such charity may
have in budgeting the funds it collects.
This is precisely what Mr. Bprnstein warned
against in his survey of the CJFWF General
Assembly in Los Angeles. What it means is
that the individual Jewish contributor must be
prepared to meet, not only growina needs but
rising inflationary trends, as well. Because
even if the need remained the same, the
amount of monev necessary to fulfil them
would in any case be greater than before.
With Greater Miami's Combined Jewish Ap-
peal now oettrng readv for the 1967 campaian,
Mr. Bernstein's warning is an apt and mean-
ingful one for each of us.
Volume 39 Number 48
Friday, December 9, 1966
26 Kislev 5726
uring the week
... as i see it
IEWISH BOOK
Month
by LEO MINDUN
m minify raises the question -
of just what a "Jewish" bZ
is. particularly because X
image ot "Jewish literature
emerging out of the observ
ancc is a grotesque and gross
ly unrealistic one. When Z
speak about British or French
or Russian writing, what .
mean is writing by a British
or French or Russian author
This is so absolutely simple that it defies understanding for the less
than tutored in literary values.
Literature is an expression of the aesthetic sensibility. In the first
place, the sensibility is tempered by individual predilection There
is no point in tracing the general influences on a writer. It depend
upon his likes and dislikes, no less than the nature of his time, He
may be an American, but his interests may lie principally with the
artists of the Irish Renaissance. This would mean that he responds
to the technical and artistic discoveries and feelings of Joyce. for
example, or Synge, O'Casey. Gogarty, Yeats and O'Flaherty among
others.
But without an even more significant response to his American
nationalism, he would not be an American writer at all. i
English spoken by the Irish, the inflection, the idiomatic
the Irish history, culture and tradition none of these
any meaning within the American framework except as
clues. The American may have learnt d much about writ
the Irish, as indeed from writers in other countries, but :
bring his discoveries to the sense and sensibility ot" Anu-ric
out of it a new amalgam, or he has done nothing from
point of view.
THl ARTIST MUST TAP HIS UNCONSCIOUS
IT IS PRECISELY here that the often misunderstood and
must be frankly confessed, reprehensible Jungian cone,
raeml unconscious assumes its most valid meaning. There Is
be said for the belief that a given people have a given ,
that is fundamental to their nature. It is impalpable and thi
immeasurable-and unyielding to characterization. In most i
Ignored and never, if ever, tapped. It is born with ode's I but
it does not die with ame's ineluctable death, for it is a pa:
total people it is instilled into and shared by a!, a- .
spiritual understanding.
But the artist taps it. He taps it, or he is no artist. He res
to outside influences, but he also responds to the nature of*1iis .native
soil. In Brahms, you can hear Beethoven; but in the end. wh<
hear is "edit" Brahms. In Faulkner, you read Joyce, but: in ::.
what you read is Faulkner, a literary phenomenon that is ui
Faulkner. "Light in August" can never be confused with "Portrait
of the Artist," even if the lessons of one are implicit in the growth
and development of the other. Where both externalsinfhiei <
the racial unconscious have been properly synthesized, the crttte
never see more than mere derivatives. He will never" be confronted
by copy-art.
Perhaps the most classic example of copy-art, and it is
because it achieved aesthetic viability despite derivation bj
Virgil in tiie "Aeneid," where the Roman poet deliberately if .unwill-
ingly met Caesar's request virtually overnight to create a nal
Roman literature. Without a valid "racial" source, Jor the l:
had none of their own, he could only turn to the Greeks, and
fore synthesized nothing. For the "Aeneid is little more than the
extension of Greek history seen from a Roman point of vi
hinging on the myth that Aeneas, son of Venus, was destined b> the
gods to establish Hesperia or Italy (Rome).
*
RETURNING TO THt IRON-fRAMtD JEWISH THEME
lAfHAT HAS ALL this to do with "Jewish literature"? In to:
" Jewish Book Month, a lot. Take Bernard Malamud as an exa
author of "The Fixer," which has pervaded Jewish Book Month like
a plague. Of whom do we speak when we discuss Malamud" Is it the
author of "The Assistant." "The Magic Barrel,"- "A New Life.*' or
now "The Fixer" we mean? The opening story in "The Magic Ba
is about as "Jewish" as an American Jewish writer. I suppose, can
be. It deals with the ghetto experience transported to the hostile
environment of a foreign (American) city, where the Jew is not
a minority, but where his psychological attitude toward life has I
changed at all. What has changed is merely geographic location
In fact, the story achieves its purpose mainly as an Old
ment objective correlative Jacobs seven-year contract with i
for the hand of Rachel, after which Jacob finds that he must work
seven years longer in order to win her. What .Malamud did here was
to ignore the roots of his American racial unconscious entirely. *
cept generally to portray America as an alien environment,
therefore a source of anxiety. What he did. literally, was to CjO
trate on the mythos of his Hebraic ancestry.
This will work for a single story, or a book, or perhaps evei
or three books. After that, it must wither, and he must identify with
his environment, or the American writer, whether he be Jewish or
Christian, is no American writer at all. This was Malamud's dilemma,
which he resolved in "The New Life." But this work is not only not
Jewish, it is juvenile American and, in fact, no resolution. It is the
amateur's "Bildungsroman" the novel of the artist's personal de-
velopment which finds Malamud at his worst, a whimpering echo
of Thomas Wolfe, its uncontrolled inspiration.
For these reasons and others, in "The Fixer" he has returned t.
an iron-framed "Jewish" theme to the blood libel tales character
istic of the Russian Jewish historic experience. Here, he has learned
his lesson from Joyce that the novel is something more than a
story now, that it must be founded on myth and symbolic in the
larger sense if it is to be art at all. Reacting to his failure in "A New
Life,"he has once again sought the safety of his Jewish heritage.
*
THE ANTI-JtW IN CONTlMPOHAftY IMKATURE
MENTION MALAMUD here only because he has been the rage in
synagogue and other Jewish book review circles, where the object
is to learn "Jewish literature" and hence a scourge to enlargii -
the valid Jewish intelligence. This is not to say that "The Fixer" is not
a fine novel. But what comes after it? Malamud is only an example
of the larger dilemma. Joyce faced up to a similar one in "FinnetMi -
Wake." It took him twenty years to write and is an almost impost
exercise in communication. A far losser artist, what is there for
Malamud to anticipate? "The New Life" was not Jewish despite
Continued on Page 12-A

rnaav. December fin 1
Friday. December 9, 1966
+Jewlsli thwidkui
Page S-
CJA Names Three Leaders
* *
it *
Milton Weiss, chairman of
the 1967 Combined Jewish Appeal
campaign, has announced thj ap-
pointment of volunteers who will
trve'In a top leadership Bflpacity
on the CJA campaign cabinet
Weiss is chairman of the cabinet.
Leonard Rosen, chairman of
the board of Gulf American Lar.d
Corporation, will serve as co-
chairman of the campaign cabinet.
Rosen, who has long been active
in CJA campaigns, was a co-chair-
man of the Initial Gifts Division
in 1066, and is a member of the
board of governors of the Greater
Miami Jewish Federation.
He is chairman of the board
of directors of the Hebrew
Academy and a trustee of the
United Israel Appeal. He has
served as chairman for Greater
Miami Israel Bonds in 1964-65
and was named "Chairman of
the Year" for his efforts.
Rosen is president of Temple
Menorah, and is benefactor of the
new Temple Beth-El in Cape Cor-
al, a community which his firm
has developed.
Weiss also named two honorary
chairmen of the campaign cabinet
Jay I. Kislak and Dr. Irving
Lehrman.
Kislak, chairman of the J. I.
Kislak Mortgage Corp. of Florida,
is a member of the executive com-
mittee and board of governors of
the Greater Miami Jewish Federa-
WATER
COLOR
rVI.'JJ
KOSIN
DR. LIHRMAH
KULAK
t:on, and served as 1966 campaign
chairman of the CJA drive.
He holds memberships in num-
erous civic organizations, includ-
ing the Florida Council of 100,
Committee of 21, Kiwanis Club of
Miami, Citizens Board of the Uni-
versity of Miami, and the Young
Presidents" Organization.
Kislak is an executive board
member of the National Confer-
ence of Christians and Jews, a
board member, director, member
of the Government Research Coun-
cil Executive Committee, and past
treasurer of the Miami Dade
Chamber of Commerce.
He is an executive board mem-
ber of the Boy Scouts of America
Jewish Book Month is Topic
"Jewish Book Month" will be
the topic of a lecture by Dr. Abra-
ham Wolfson before the Spinoza
Forum for Adult Education on
Thursday. 10 a.m., in the Wash-
ington Federal, 1234 Washington
Ave.
* Felt tip pen with fine
point
* Slim, handy styling
* Non-toxic, safe for
children
* 8 water colors, won't
bleed thru paper
'* For school, artwork,
coloring, notes, busi-
ness charts, posters
Lit
Glass &
Mirror Works
1 10VE YA
ESTER ,
K t
BARNETT'S
OFFICE SUPPLIES
& EQUIPMENT
FREE
ESTIMATES
STORE FRONTS
MIRRORS
FURNITURE TOPS
RESILVERING
BEVELING
CUSTOM WORK
Call
FR 1-1363
for
CLASS
136 S. W. 8th ST.
and a past president and member
of the board of governors of the
Standard Club of Greater-Miami.
A past vice president and
campaign chairman of the
United Fund of Dade County,
Kislak now serves as a member
of the UF board. He is a past
director of the American Red
Cross in Miami, former member
of the Miami Redevelopment
Commission, former director of
the Florida Historial Society, as-
sociate trustee of the University
of Pennsylvania, and foreman
of the Federal Grand Jury.
Dr. Lehrman, spiritual leader of
Temple Emanu-El, served as CJA
campaign chairman for two years,
1964 and 1965. Vice president of'
the Greater Miami Jewish Federa- i
tion, Dr. Lehrman serves on Fed-
eration's executive committee,
board of governors, and is a mem-
ber of the steering committee of
the survey on Jewish education
currently being conducted by Fed-
eration. He is a member of the
National Rabbinical Advisory
Committee of the UJA and the
National Council of the Joint Dis-
tribution Committee.
He is a former secretary of the
Rabbinical Assembly of America
and served as president of the
Rabbinical Assembly's Southeast-
ern Region. He also served as past
president of the Rabbinical Asso-
ciation of Greater Miami. Dr.
Lehrman is a member of the Rab-
j binic Council of the Jewish Theo-
logical Seminary of America, and
has served on a number of agency
boards which receive funds from
the CJA.
Members of thfi l'.*t7 eanvjmipn cab-
inet an- l*ounard Abesn, Mrs. Jack
AUin, H:thb. Mayer AbnmowltS, Wil-
liam AgmnoVA. It. Williams Aplo, \j.
Jules Ark in. Sidney Affonovtti, Jacob
M. Arvey, Jerome I Hank. Sain Hlank,
Louts Breslw, shepaxd Broad, David
i' Caiaman, i-
Cohen, Arthur Cburahon, Leo Eisen-
steln, Leon J, kh. Ben Essen, Paul
Paske, A. C. Kino. Martin Fin*-, David
R, Eneeman. Sam Fox, Samuel x.
Ftiedlandi Sydney Gana. Ben QIHer,
Mrs. A, L. Gllvkman, bam Goldman,
8am A. Goldstein, Abu Green, Nath-
an S. Gumentck, fcOUll Harris. Mai-
shall S. Harris. Sam J. Helmsn.
Other commutes members include
Daniel Seal Heller, Brnesi Janls,
Howard Kane, Aaron M. Wanner, Irv-
ing Kaplan, Leon Kaplan. Louli Ken-
in. taron Kravtts, Mrs. Inez Krenaky,
Robert Krinzman. Sidney Lefcourt,
Mra. Jean '. Lehman, Mrs. Irving
Lehrman, Sam Luby Jr.. Robert
Macht, Baron de Hlrsoty Meyer, Ben
Meyers, Harry Mlsrach, A. J. Molas-
ky, Alexander MUSS, Stanley C. My-
ers. Max Orovits, Heritert Paige, Nor-
ton s. Pallot, Loula Poller, Jack s.
Poplck, Jacob Rablnowlts, Jfwph M
Rose, William B. Ruben, Irving Ru-1 ton Sirkin. Louis P. ETnetman, ':
bin, Seymour Rubin, Hubert Russell. Soggi David Stusln, Stewart Bun
Also," Arnold Seeder, Mendel] M Carl Busaklnd, Ueorge J. Tall*
Sellg, Daniel Sepler, John N Serbln, Harold Thurman, Byron J. T
Mrs. Robert Shapiro, Pred K Knot-net, Carl Welnkle, Mrs. Carl Wei
Sol Bhaye, Saul Sllberman, Law- William Welntraub, Irving Wi
rence i: Singer, Harry Blrkln, Mil- A. B. Wiener.
- -
i,
ioff.
HBKUKJ1H
GELT
for next year
Join Dade Federal's 1967
CHANUKAH CLUB
\\
//
It's exactly like the other weekly clubs. $1.00 or $5.00
set aside each week in the plan of your choice will
provide extra Holiday enjoyment next year for you or
someone you want to remember.
Fill out the form below and mail it with your first
payment today. We'll send you your coupon book by
return mail. The Chanukah Club is available only at the
following branch offices .
ALLAPATTAH BRANCH
1400 N.W. 36th STREET
MIAMI, FLORIDA 33142
TAMIAMI BRANCH
1901 S.W. 8th STREET
MIAMI, FLORIDA 33135
Here is my application and first weekly payment in the
$ of Dade Federal's Chanukah Club
plan
Nome tpleaie print)
SJi,
ress
Telephone
Signature
NOW!
REGULAR PASSBOOK
SAVINGS ACCOUNTS
2 WAYS TO SAVE
AT DADE FEDERAL
n
Vs'A
Current Dividend Rate
paid and compounded quarterly.
Save by the 20th Earn from the 1st **&
SAVINGS ACCOUNT
CERTIFICATES
When held for at least 6 months.
Minimum investment $2,000 or more.
Save by the 10th Earn from the 1st.
7 CONVENIENT OFFICES SERVE DADE COUNTY
Main Office: 101 East Flagler Streat
Allapaltah Branch I Tamlami Bunch I Edison Cenlai Branch I North Miami Branch I Ksndall Bunch I Cutler Ridf* Branch
1400 N.W. 36th St. | 1901 S.W. 8th St. j MOO N.W. 7th Av. | 126O0 N.W. 7th Avt. j U.S. 1 at S.W. IMth St. 11M08 Caribbean Blvd
Our Main Office is open Mondays and our Branch Offices on Fridays
until 8:00 P.M. On other weekdeys. we're open until 4:30 P.M.

Page 6-A
-Jenisti fk>ridian
Friday. December
Speaking at dedication ceremonies Sunday is er, honorary president of Mount Sinai Hos-
Max Orovitz, chairman, board oi trustees, pital, Jackie Gleason, Maj. and Mrs. Albert
Seated (left to right) are Baron de Hirsch Mey- Warner, and Dr. S. Charles Werblow.
DEDICATION OF $1.5 MILLION FACILITY
ML Sinai Launches Pavilion
Max Orovitz, chairman of the
board of trustees. Invocation was
by Dr! Joseph R. Narot, of Temple
Israel.
Also appearing on the program
were Dr. Joseph Harris, vice pres-
ident of the medical staff; Mrs.
Yale N. Levinson. president of the
hospital auxiliary: Dr. Richard
Deutch. DDS, chairman of the sus-
taining board of fellows; Morris
Lapidus. architect for the Warner
Pavilion; Ronald Markham, con-
tractor; Arthur Rosichan, executive
director of the Greater Miami
Jewish Federation; and Miami
Beach Police Chief Rocky Pom-
eiance.
Baron de Hirsch Meyer, honor-
ary president, introduced world
renowned TV comic Jackie Glea-
son.
Leonard Abess. president of Mt.
Sinai, brought greetings, as well
as Sam Heiman, chairman of the
building and grounds committee.
Past president of the hospital
staff. Dr. S. Charles Werblow, in-
troduced Maj. Warner.
Women Schedule
Chanuka Forty
A festive Chanuka parts win u.
held as part of lh9 monVv ^
ing of the Ys vnci ,,"
YMHA of Greater Mianu
a.m., Wednesday.
I he
at 10
M
There win be enter!
in Syd SVol \>. direeto i Z
of the
Jewish Cultural An, Department
of the YMHA. Refresh,,,,^ Z
be served.
Complimentary baby-sit ag serv-
ice will be provided for than
women with small child n who
wish to attend and partii .ate i
the morning party, which -. 0pcn
to all women of the Miami com-
munity.
CAr?IB fl MIAMI
MIRACLE1163 St.
Dedication of Mount Sinai Hos-
pital'a new ISO-bed Albert and
Bessie Warner Pavilion was held
rn Sunday, with over 600 people
in attendance. Jackie Qleason
made a special appearance at the
ceremony to pay tribute to Maj.
'Freddy the Clown' Slated
'Freddy the Clown" will be
leatured at the children's Chanuka
party at the YMHA of Greater Mi-
ami on Friday at 1:15 p.m.
Warner, one of the founders of
the Warner film dynasty.
Maj. and Mrs. Warner presented
Mount Sinai with SI.500.000 for
the construction of the new edi-
fice following his hospitalization
at Mount Sinai two years ago.
The new wing, on the bayside
of the hospital grounds, is a
four-story building, the three
middle floors of which are pa-
tient areas. Rooms have the lat-
est in modern furniture and
contain free television and tele- .
m
him
PERMANENT
COLOR

Friday. December 9, 1966
Jewish florBcfiar
Page 7-A
Thant Lists Safety Factors
Beth David Nursery and Daily Kindergarten Rhythm Band
prepares to entertain at the Sisterhood's open board meeting
Wednesday, 9:30 a.m., at the South Dade School, 7500 SW
120th St. Bottom row (left to right) are Todd Tendrich, Lisa
Martin, Sarah Gadon, Beth Perlman. Second row are Donald
Traurig, Michael Frank, Lawrence Scheer. Top row are
Charles Bretan, Daniel Goldstein, Nathan Seidan, Samuel
Pearl.
Klan Wizard Holds TV Interview;
'Florida Is Prosperous Growth Spot'
UNITED NATIONS (JTA)
Secretary-General U Thant pro-
posed this week to the Security |
Council methods to strengthen the
effectiveness of the United Nations
TruW Supervision Organization to-
ward "safeguarding the peace"' be
tween Israel and the four Arab
states with which it. had signed
armistice agreements in 1949,
Egypt. Jordan. Syria and Lebanon.
In a special memorandum to the
Security Council. Thant noted
that, in the recent Council debates
on the Israeli. Syrian and Jor-
danian contlicts, members of the
X'ouncil had referred "'to the ques-
tions of how the UNTSO might be
made a more effective instrument
for avoiding aimed conflict in the
area."
He reiterated the UNTSO's
present methods, noted that
UNTSO's force includes only 133
observers, that UNTSO has only
a few border observation posts
and cannot "play the buffer un-
dertaken by peace forces." He
then called on all the states in-
volved to give their fullest co-
operation to UNTSO and pro-
posed these steps
li The chairmen of the Mixed Ar-
mistice Commissions should be
enabled "to get in touch with re-
sponsible authorities on either side
at any time of the day or night":
21 "The parties should agree to the
deployment by UNTSO of mobile
observation posts in sensitive sec-
tors or wherever it may be ap-
parent that a UNTSO presence
might avert a military confronta-
tion ": 3) "The parties should give
to UNTSO every facility for get-
ting its observers to the scene of
an incident as speedily as pos-
sible":
4) "The parties should also ayree
to a wider employment by UNTSO
experts in its conduct of investiga-
tions, including trackers with,
UNTSO dogs and handler, sur-
veyors, demolition and explosive
specialists and interpreters for
both Arabic and Hebrew -langu-
ages"; and 5i "Having a helicop-
ter available and a speedboat sta
tioned on Lake Tiberias would, no-
doubt, greatly facilitate the con-
duct of UNTSO investigations, al-
though they would, of course, sub-
stantially increase the cost of
operation."
Mrs. Chasin New Bank Veep
At the board of directors meet-
ing of the Peoples American Na-
tional Bank, held Nov. 30. Mrs.
Norman Chasin was elected a vice
president of the bank. Mrs. Chasin
has been with the Peoples Group
of National Banks for five years
and is also active in many local
civic, banking and philanthropic
organizations.
#
United Klans of America, oper-
ating in 38 states, finds Florida a
"prosperous" spot for its growing
organization, said Robert Shelton.
Imperial Wizard of the United
Klans of America, on a television
program entitled "A Conversation
with a Ku Klux Klan Imperial
Wizard," telecast on Dec. 4 by sta-
tion WFTV of Orlando.
The Klan leader made the state-
ment in the hour-long program.
Ray Ruester. vice president in
charge of WFTV news, pru-lapud
the interview two weeks ago when
Shelton was in Central Florida to
appear at a public rally with six
other Klan leaders.
Shelton also charged in the
television interview that the
"House Committee on Un-Amer-
ican Activities was nothing more
than a political football used for
political expediency by the pres-
ent federal bureaucracy because
we were becoming a stumbling
block in the paths of the tyran-
nical powers under LBJ."
He is currently appealing a one-
year jail sentence for contempt of
Congress. Shelton has been con-
victed by a federal court jury, for
refusing to discuss and turn over
subpoened Klan documents to a
subcommittee of the House Com-
mittee on Un-American Activities.
Shelton protested that the Com-
mittee's investigation was not an
"authenticated investigation." and
"'the Committee has been taken
over by the element."'
WFTV president. Joseph I.,
lii'cchiiei. received the 1965 Leon-
ard L. Abess Award presented an-
nually by the B'nai B'rith Anti-
Defamation League.
Bikur Cholim
Honors Couple
Bikur Cholim, auxiliary' organ-
ization of the Israelite Center, will
honor Mr. and Mrs. Max Parness
at the Oneg Shabbat on Friday.
President of the Center, Parness
and his wife will be cited "for gen-
erous assistance beyond the call of
duty for many years." Among their
contributions has been the dona-
tion of the printing for all Bikur
Cholim functions.
MALE HELP WANTED
PUBLIX MARKETS
is now taking applications for the
following jobs: Stockmen, Meat
Cutters, Front Personnel. Make ap-
plication at the following locations:
2S51 Le Jeune Road, Coral Gables;
12850 Biscayne Blvd., N. Miami.
FEMALE HELP WANTED
PUBLIX MARKETS
is now taking applications for the
fallowing job: Cashiers. Make ap-
plication at the following locations:
2551 Le Jeune Road, Coral Gables;
12850 Biscayne Blvd., N. Miami.
Avoid the Holiday Rush
Call NOW for
TUNING & REPAIRING
OF YOUR PIANO
IRVING GOLDBERG 621-0084
Cantor Wanted
FOR FRIDAY NIGHTS or WEEK-ENDS
Also for HIGH HOLIDAYS Write to
POST OFFICE BOX .1091
WEST HOLLYWOOD, FLORIDA 33023
NOW A LITTLE BIT
OF ISRAEL
COMES TO FLORIDA
CRUISE TO THE
CARIBBEAN ON THE
LUXURIOUS '
Shalom
- W A N T i:I -
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR-
ADMINISTRATOR for
Synagogue in Baltimore
Submit resume to E.D.,
Box 2973, Miami, Fla. 33101
Now yoi can cruise on the nicest
luxury liner afloat, the new Shalom,
right fre m Port Everglades. The at-
mosphere aboard the Shalom is a
unique blend of Israeli warmth and
Caribbean excitement...and you'll
visit such places as St. Maarten,
St. Thomas, San Juan, Guadeloupe.
January 6 for 8 days. Reservations
are going fast, so hurry.
S.S. Shalom, Israel Registry, built
in 1964. For more information see
your travel agent, or call
u 'ousrco
LINES'^.
Owner's Representative:
Americ.-n Israeli Shipping Co Inc.,
25 Southeast First St.. Miami. Fla.
CHANUKA GREETINGS
THE HACK FAMILY
MIAMI FOOD STORE
65 N. E. 14th Street
Phone FR 3-2038
Visit Our Store on U.S. 1,
Plantation Key, Florida
"Keys Payicrir''
HAPPY CHANUKA
TO ALL
JOHN I*
POWERS
KOOFIX.
RL-ROOFING REPAIRS
Ph. 531-3018
Licensed and Insured
Budget Terms
1616 ALTON ROAD
Miami Beach
TO ALL OUR
FRIENDS & CUSTOMERS
A MOST
HAPPY CHANUKA
Goldman's 71st St.
SHELL SERVICE
71st & ABBOTT
UN 6-9951
A Happy Chanuka to All
Mr. and Mrs. Harry J. Sonz
and Lori Marsha
IEAI ISTATI
Investments and General Insurance
350 Lincoln Road Bldg.
Meiianine
MIAMI BEACH
A HAPPY CHANUKA TO ALL
CURTISS NATIONAL BANK
OF MIAMI SPRINGS
4299 N.W. 36th STREET at LE JEUNE ROAD
JERRY LEADER, President
Taking your
family North?
Travel together
on Seaboard.
A Streamliner trip is family togetherness
at its fun-filled best. It has everything.
Wide-window views of Historyland.
Comfortable private room sleeping cars
and reserved coach accommodations.
Smart lounges and tavern observation
cars. Delightful mealswith special '
children's menus. And lots of friendly
service (our Registered Nurses like
children, and vice versa).
RAILROAD
THE ROUTE OF COURTEOUS SERVICE
Your choice of morning and afternoon departures:
SILVER METEOR SILVER STAR
Lv. Miami 9:00 AM Lv. Miami 1:00 PM
LiOeidl Oaggase allowance-
For reservations: 3,71-6611
Staboird Ollicti: 173 E Flagk" Si 2206 N W 7th Ave Miami:
1553 Washington Avr Miami Be.x'i; 1240 S E. lllh Ave Hialeali;
W Ho'ly*oo

P=ge 8-A
+Jenist> norkiiar)
?i' Jewish National Fund banquet Sunday night at the Fon-
'-. nebleau Hotel are (left to right) Dr. Max Lipschitz, Jacob
C. Fishman, Miss Lillian Goodman, Mrs. Eva Blum, Dr. Irving
lehrman, in whose name a S5 million cultural center in
Me Ami was announced, U.S. Sen. Ernest Gruening (D.-Alas.),
Mrs. Miriam Press, Sam Schachno, Abraham Grunhut, Ben-
jamin Appel, Rabbi Mayer Abramowitz, and Zev W. Kogan.
$5 MILLION PROJECT REVEALED BY JEWISH NATIONAL FUND
Plan Dr. Lehrman Cultural Center
2-v W. Kogan, Miami Beach at-
' ley and Jewish National Fund
lerder, announced Sunday night
the Greater Miami JNF Coun-
cil '.vill launch a Dr. Irving Lehr-
rrjT Cultural Center in this com-
ity's twin city in Israel, Me
A I
.'
E "me 700 persons at a banquet
which U.S. Sen. Ernest Gruen-
ing (Dem.-Alas.) was the guest
speaker at the Fontainebleau Ho-
tel also heard the Jewish National
Fund's decision to pledge to raise
$5 million over a five-year period
"to make Me Ami secure, and so
to strengthen the borders of the
Jewish state."
Dr. Lehrman, chairman of the
Foundation for the Jewish Na-
tional Fund, who visited Me
Ami this past summer, following
his last visit there when he
brought an American Torah to
the new border community, de-
clared in response: "My father
of blessed memory and my
grandfather of blessed memory,
revered rabbis and scholars,
cried their eyes out for decades
Gruening Slams U.S. Mideast Policy
I S. Senator Ernest Gruening of
A.'r-ka Sunday urged nationwide
ests and reprisals next Elec-
tion Day against present U.S. pol-
ices in the Middle East.
5n. Gruening, Democrat of1
A ska, spoke before a tightly-
ish National Fund at the Fon-|
if-ebleau Hotel.
I am profoundly shocked at the
. (I taken by our government at
UN against Israel.
Israel is the only nation in
-t Mideast that represents the
.try principles for which our
en and women have laid down
'-eir lives. Yet we condemn her
for taking the only action pos-
sible to protect the lives of her
citizens," said Sen. Gruening.
I
"Every citizen, Jewish or Chris-1
tian, should make his protest!
known through the ballot box.
That's the only language our poli- \
ticians understand. The United |
States can send men to fight a j
war 10,000 miles away in Viet |
Nam, but can not prevent a war
in the Middle East.
"I am afraid for another Pearl \
Harbor in Tel Aviv or Jerusalem.
It will not mean a little war. It
will be World War III."
One of the nation's formidable
*\C*V

JEWISH
CONVALESCENT
HOME OF
SOUTH FLORIDA
310 Collins Ave.
Phone 532-6491
NON-PKOFIT NON-SECTARIAN
Miami Beach's Only
Kosher Nursing Home and Health Center
SIDNEY SIEGEL
Executive Director
SARAH KEISER
President
(Rates start at $55)
-:- LEARN TO DRIVE -:-
EASY METHOD AUTO DRIVING SCHOOL
South Florida's Largest and Best
GIFT CERTIFICATES AVAILABLE
State Approved Qualified Instructors
Miami, Pb. HI 8-2661 No. Miami, PL 8-4719 Ft. Laudcrdale, JA 3-7334
GENERAL WINDOW
REPAIR SERVICE
37SS BIRD ROAD
448-0890
0U SLIDING DOORS OLAZINS
, SECURED AGAINST BURGLARY! + CAULKINQ
WE CARRY A COMPLETE """
LINE OF REPLACEMENT PARTS
opponents against U.S. policy in
Southeast Asia, the Alaskan legis-
lator noted that "Nasser will not
gain any more aid from the United
States as long as Egypt resells
our aid to countries behind the
Iron Curtain."
Speaking before some 700 guests
at the Jewish National Fund ban-
quet. Gruening said that Israel has
been the most successful among
the new nations politically, eco-
nomically, and productively.
With Egypt out of the way for
American aid, he stressed that
America should "show an active
role in aiding Israel." He em-
phasized that three sessions ago
in Congress, he found approval
of his Amendment ending aid
to Egypt.
"But a provisionary clause has
been added, stating that the Pres-
ident may give Nasser aid if in the
national interest," a rider Gruen-
ing roundly attacked.
He said to JNF supporters that
"U.S. dollars had enabled Egypt
to wage war in Yemen, to foment
trouble in Jordan and Saudi Arab-
ia, and to stir up trouble in Cyp-
rus. Now this has changed, and
America should begin to recipro-
cate aid to Israel."
He called upon the United
States, which has extensive de-
fense treaties such as SEATO,
which guarantees the independ-
ence of small countries of the
area against attack. "Why in the
name of God is Israel not in-
cluded in such a treaty. Of all
countries, Israel deserves it
most.
"Ambassador Goldberg was
wronp to condemn Israel when Is-
rael fought back for survival."
VERN0N D. BOND, JR.
BOND
Transfer Co., Inc.
Trucking
2160 NW 8th AVENUE
PHONE 374-3144
for the rebirth of Zion, and they
did not live to see ft.
birth of Israel and the inga,heri,, >
of the ex,les,n war and Peace, bu
I have this honor bestowed upon
In describing his first visit to
Me Ami four years ago. Dr. Leh
man declared: "Had it not been
for the Jordanian attack on th
eve of the 18th year of isr 'r:
independence. Me Ami would hTv.
been turned over for civilian M
cupancy. Instead, memorial
ices were held for the fallen hem
Iitzchak Neufeld. 20-year-old com'
mander of the outpost.
"Why does the United State-
send 325,000 soldiers to Viet Nam
to protect that country against on
slaught from the north, and at the
same time condemn Israel when
she resorts to self-defense against
marauders and terrorists who mir
der Israelies on Israeli soil?
"Despite everything," said Dr.
Lehrman, who is spiritual leader
of Temple Emanu-EI, "Israel %
will survive, and its people will
survive."
Chairman of the evening was
Rabbi Mayer Abramowitz. spirit
ual leader of Temple Menorah. In-
vocation was delivered by Dr. Max
Lipschitz, spiritual leader of Tern
pie Beth Torah. Millie Drazier ac
companied guest soprano, Molly
Stark, at the piano.
I t-t mt l
RENTALS!
effld.nd.i, Deluxe Efficiencies, Bed-
room Apartments, Deluxe Bedroom
Apartments with 1 '/i bams, 2 Bed-
room Apartments with 2 full bathrooms,
WHkerCeflfarafedwra
1100 West Avenue Miami Beach Phone 5-32-781 5
-'. SiAUTtful &ISCAYNE BAf

Friday. December 9, 1966
vJewisti ncridfi&r
Page 9-A
Wallace Eyes Third Party Ticket Lead
New West German Foreign
Ministe: Willi Brandt, Social
Democrat in the Kiesinger
coalition, is expected to try
to maintain friendly relations
with Israel. (See Page 1-A.)
Continued from Page 1-A
had to woo quite a few voters:
i away fiom both a conservative
, Barry Ooldwater and Wallace's
i fellow southerner, Lyndon B.j
Johnson. Actually, he committed'
himself in 1964 to run in 16 states;
but once he had made his pub-
licity splash and satisfied his de-
sire to annoy both the Republican
and Democratic high command,
he drew in his horn-.
Since that lime, our ration
has set a much larger stage for
the poli ical emergence of a
Wallace force. His segregationist
preachments and the alarms he
sounds about violence In the
streets adds up to the kind of
campaign material enabling
George P. Mahoney to make the
frightening threat he did in
Maryland and bringing Lester
Maddox so close to the govern-
or's chair in Georgia, he could
try it out for size.
Added to that, the whopping
Reds Warn
Syria On
War Aims
LONDON (JTA) The Soviet
Union indicated to Syria Sunday
that it had better tone down its
calls fci a "war of liberation"
against 3*Tael, and concentrate in-
stead en constructive develop-
ments.
At the same time, the Kremlin
attack*;! Jordan's King Hussein
for opposing "piogressive ele-
ments" in the Middle East, and
gain B:cu3ed Western "imperial-
ism" ol responsibility for the cur-
rent tt.-.iions in the Middle East.
It also criticized Israel, but in a
much milder form than earlier.
The Soviet \iew appeared in j
Pravda. organ of the Communist
Party, and was interpreted in part
as a hint that the Kremlin wants
the regime in Syria, which it has
support; d, to go easy on its war
aims. -.=sertini that even the
West recognizes now that the So-
viet policy in the Middle East
aims tovard lessening of tensions
and securing peace in the area,
Pravda -aid: "It is not on the bat-
tlefield, but on constructive sites,
that people build their future."
Pravda reminded Syria that the
USSR has been providing eco-
nomic and technical aid for the
construction of a proposed Syrian
dam or "he Euphrates River.
Jordan Key to
Mid-East Peace
Continued from Page 1-A
the Jerdenian crisis stemming
from Hie Israeli raid.
Tin '.ing 'old a press confer
ence ix Amman that Jordan was
willing to consider basing United
Nations peace-keeping troops on
the Jor: anian-Israeli border.
Jordan reported a clash with
Syrian commanders in which four
Syrian- were captured who, ac-
cording to Jordan, admitted they
had been sent by Syria to sabo-j
tage installations at Jordan. The
statement, if true, would indicate
a new and more serious division
within the Arab world camps of i
"royalists" such as King Hussein,;
and the "revolutionary" regimes
of Egypt, Syria and Iraq.
Rabbi Berger's Sermon Theme
Thorre for a series of Friday
evening sermons to be delivered
9 through December by Rabbi Max-
well Berger at Temple Zamora
will be "Are We Jewish, Relig-
ious or Confused?" First topic will
be "I Am a Good Jew, But "
two-to-one defeat of New York's
Police Review Board program is
bound to give the Wallacites heart
in their determination to whack
away at both major parties. Grant-
ed there were thousands of sober
and dedicated Democrats and Re-
publicans who themselves wanted
to get rid of the Police Review
Beard, it is still true that many
solid communal agencies like the
American Jewish Committee,
American Jewish Congress. Anti-
Defamation League, Jewish Labor
Committee, Catholic Interracial
Council. Protestant Council of
New York and such leading polit-
ical figures as Mayor John V.
Lindsay and Senators Jacob K.
Javits and Robert F. Kennedy put
their names on the line to keep
'he Police Review Board in busi-
ness.
Anyone who has attended Birch-
style meetings at which the "back-
yourlocal-police" battle cry be-
comes a part of the mystique of
the forces of fear will readily un-
derstand this allusion. The fierce
fight to limit the review of police
practices to police themselves is
deeply significant.
Given such a civic atmosphere;
given the political campaign re-
sults that amount to telling Con-
gress to pull back from social wel-
fare legislation; given the reac-
tion of anger that is certain to
emerge in America's hobbled and
sinouldeiing black ghettos; given
the blow now dealt with the anti-
poverty campaign; given the de-
feat suffered by those who have
worked so hard for the open occu-
pancy principles in housing; given
the tacit mandate to concentrate
more on guns and ease off some-
what on butter, many political
forces of the nation can be ex-
pected now to take on a far less
liberal coloration.
In such a climate, Gov. Wal-
lace has the opportunity he was
groping for in 1964, but with a
gate better oiled for 1968. As
early as Sept. 19, while attend-
ing a meeting of the Southern
Governors Conference, he came
close to announcing his candi-
dacy for the Presidency. The
day after the election, he let it
be known that Governor-elect
Ronald Reagan of California is
too liberal to head the ticket.
All of which suggests that it is
not too soon to have another look
at Article 2 of the Constitution of
the United States. There it is
clearly written that if no presi-
dential candidate receives a ma-
jority of the electoral votes, the
duty of deciding the presidency
shall fall upon the House of Rep-
resentatives. .Many members of
that branch of Congress are from,
southern and other states where
men in power are fond of kicking
over the political traces. In case
Wallace continues to gather steam
and in case the Vietnam crisis in
still with us in 1968. there is a
possibility that a tie may be brok-
en not by the electorate but by the
Congressmen.
^v^./|,l|>^|H.jM[,-Wjy^yg..^.ya-y,-.------?fiffffma"l
'\.

MET STAR JAN PEERCE TO SING
Bond Chanuka Fete Sunday
New Money Order Design
Postmaster E. M. Dunlap has
announced that new postal money
orders designed to cut in half
their processing time thiough
banking channels are now on sale
throughout the nation, according
to Postmaster General Lawrence
F. O'Brien.

Jon Peerce
The S.R.O. sign will be out for
the second annual community-
wide Chanuka Festival on Sunday
night at the
Miami Beach
Auditori-
um. Officials of
the Israel Bond
Organiza-
tion, sponsors
of the event, in-
dicated that the
event "will be
a complete sell-
out, duplicating
last year's
Festival.''
Compli-
mentary tickets
arc provided to
all 1966 Great-
er Miami Israel Bond purchasers
-------
Religious School
Weekend Activity
\ variety of activities took place
at Beth Torah Religious School last
v eekend headed by guest speakers,
with impressive Torah ceremonies
also held on Sunday morning.
On Saturday morning. Abraham
Tooch. director of the Jewish
Agency for the Southeast Region
ol the United States, spoke at serv-
ices of the student congregation
in the youth auditorium on Israels
18th year of independence.
He was introduced by Michael
Newman, vice president of the
congregation, welcomed by Alan
Bernstein and Erica Reiss, pres-
idents of the congregation, with
Jason Kati, Sheldon Enjler and
Mark Greenspan serving as ,
rabbis.
Following the services, Tooch
V. as feted at a special Kiddush I
given for officers of the congrega-|
tion. At the same time, students
ol the Alef Congregation held their
first Shabbat luncheon under the
direction of Miss Toby Cavell, with
more than 30 youngsters from the
aga of 5 to 8 participating. Each |
veek they conduct their own Shab-
bat services, with Andy Ross and
Moshe Gittelson serving as rabbis.
On Sunday morning, a ceremony \
was held marking the beginning of j
the study of Humash (Bible) by
class 2C of the Religious School'
taught by Mrs. Howard Homer.
and are obtainable through the i
Israel Bond office. 424 Lincoln Ln.
The star-studded program will
include Metropolitan opera star,
Jan Peerce, folk humorist Emil
Cohen, the Miami Beach Sym-
phony Orchestra under the baton
of Barnet Breeskin, the Hora
Fetival Dancers, the Greater
Cantor Breeh
Guest Vocalist
Cantor Saul H. Brech, of Tem-
ple Beth Raphael. Miami Beach,
will be guest vocalist at the South-
gate Hadassah Founder's Day
luncheon on Dec. 12 in the Gigi
Room of the Fontaincbleau Hotel.
Festivities will begin at 12:30
p.m. Mrs. Tillie Schwartz is chair-
man, and president is Mrs. Joseph
Rosenberg.
The chapter held an Oneg Shab-
bat on Saturday. Dec. 3. in the Ter-
race Room of Southgate Towers.
Review of the book. "The Fixer.''
was presented by Mrs. Hada.sah
Fassler Mrs. Henry Schwartz
served as chairman.
Mrs. Sadie Adakin portrayed the
angel. Entertainment was followed
by refreshments.
HAPPY CHANUKA
from the new management
Modern
Fruit Shippers
1319 WASHINGTON AVE.
MIAMI BEACH, FLORIDA
Phone 538-0135
Evel/n Streiff Louis Felshman
CHANUKA GREETINGS
from
Madamoiselle
Beauty Salon
124 Ponce de Leon Blvd.
CORAL GABLES, FLA.
Call 444-1395
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
from
CASTER
INSURANCE AGENCY
2505 Ponce de Leon Blvd.
CORAL GABLES
Call 443-7475
A Happy Chanuka
HONEY & TOM
JONES
SETTLEDOWNS
1764 S.W. 3rd AVENUE
373-9571
HAPPY CHANUKA
TO ALL
PERFECT
TELEVISION
9541 HARDING AVE.
MIAMI BEACH
Phone 866-4723
HAPPY CHANUKA
TO ALL
ED MORSE
FORD
2198 N.E. 163rd Street
NORTH MIAMI BEACH
Phone 9491311
MR. M. P0DELL of the
FLORIDA
DIAMOND SETTING
INSTITUTE
160 N.E. 4th Street, Miami
377-3510
Extends Holiday Greetings
to All
TO ALL SEASON'S
BEST WISHES
HERBERT C. FRINK
VANN CLEANERS
& LAUNDRY
JE 1-3132
528 Jefferson Ave.
Miami Baach
Miami Choral Society, directed
by Lawrence Hedgpeth and the
Scottish Bagpipers.
A highlight will be the dramatic
pageant. "A Saga of Israel." A
special musical score for the page-
ant has been prepared by Conduc-
tor Breeskin. Musical consultant is
David Conviser. Choreographer is
Jack Nagle.
The narration will feature Ar-
nold Warren, of WGBS. and Ken
Taylor, of WLBW. Ch. 10.
Peerce will chant the traditional
Chanuka ceremony and present a
special program from the classic
Hebraic liturgy.
A Happy Chanuka
to my Customers & Friends
THELMA DAVIS of the
LITTLE RIVER
KNIT SHOP
8206 N.E. 2nd Avenue
Phone 754-3121
A Most Happy Chanuka
Mlflf OF
MIAMI
2454 NW 5th AVENUE
377-8051
Jack Karrin
Leonard Coleman
Howard Margoluis
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
Rebbv
Dress
Corp.
3240 N.W. 27th Avenue
Miami, Florida
CHANUKA
GREETINGS
ALL METAL
FABRICATIONS
4222 S.W. 75th AVE.
Miami
Ph. 223-1851
AL & JACK ZISMAN
GREEN BROOK
CORP.
R. SOLOVCI, President
1055 E. 16th STREET
Hialaah
HAPPY HOLIDAY
GREETINGS TO ALL
Best Wishes for
A Happy Chanuka
BALDWIN
Mortgage Co.
BALDWIN
Insurance Agency, Inc.
PNONI VI 44181
840 Biscayue Blvd.. Miami
TO OUR MANY FRIENDS .
PATRONS AND ACQUAINTANCES
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
MURPHY &
JORDAN, Inc.
INSURANCE MANAGERS
and AGENTS
AFFILIATED WITH
MURPHY & JORDAN, INC.
WITH OFFICES AT
161 Park Avenue
Rutherford, N.J.
AND
233 Broadway
New York 7, N.Y.
COMPLETE INSURANCE SERVICE
3000 Biscayne Boulevard
FR 7-2318
A HAPPY CHANUKA TO ALL
CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK
OF WEST HOLLYWOOD
SOUTH STATE RD. 7 AT WASHINGTON STREET
P.O. BOX 3597, HOLLYWOOD, FLORIDA 33023
Where You can Enjoy the Convenience of
Doing all Your Banking "Under One Roc f"
Members
Citiiens National Group Federal Reserve System
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
HENRY D. PERRY, Chairman of The Board
CHAS. W. LANTZ, Pres. & Group Coordinator
VACATION THIS YEAR AT THE
ACH HOTEL and a"^ "'
?-
BEACH HOTEL and
COTTAGE COLONY
Fun galore at one of the world's finest vacation resorts over^
looking the Caribbean with magnificent tropical mountains
rising just beyond.
Everything for your enjoyment swimming pool, private
beach, water skiing, sailing, canoeing, skin diving, deep sea
fishing charter cruisers, horseback riding, the fabulous Carib-
bean Dining Room and Birds Nest Bar, moonlit barbecues on
the beach, native floor shows, calypso bands, dance
orchestra.
I PUm mm mmforgeUmbU bolidmy ml lb* Gold** Himd
Hoiil, Wrkt today tor frit broeburt
ORACABFSSA, JAMAICA, W. I.
on the North Shore at Ocho Rios
___

* iKiuT. mm nmrwr :i
Frickiy. December 9, 196B
Jew isti fBarSdUan
Page 11-A
CONG. WELTNER DUE AT JAN. 15 FLORIDA REGION GATHERING HERE
Maddox Foe Will Keynote ADL Meeting
Cify of Hope Review
Cong. Charles L. Weltner, of
Georgia, will be keynote speaker at
the forthcoming annual board
meeting of the Anti-Defamation
League of B'nai B'rith on Sunday,
Jan. 15, at the Dupont Plaza
Hotel.
Judge William L. Pallot, chair-
man of the Florida regional board,
said that "we are delighted with
the Congressman's acceptance of
our invitation because we recog
nizv in him a man of principles,
truly dedicated to what is best for
his country.
"Although favored to win *
third term in th House of Re-
presentatives in November, he
withdrew his own nomination
rattier than support his party's
nominee for governor, Lester G.
Maddox. Because he was com-
pletely opposed to the racist
views of Mr. Maddox, he could
not, in good conscience, comply
with his party's loyalty oath to
support all partv nominees. Act-
ing as he did, Mr. Weltner took
a step which is most rare in our
country's political history."
Born in Atlanta in 1927. Mr.
Teddy Approved UN Censure
JERUSALEM (JTA) Sen.
Edward Kennedy told the press
here this week that he associated
himself with the Security Council
Nov. 25 condemnation of Israel for
its action against Jordan on Nov.
13.
The Massachusetts Democrat
came to Israel from a visit to Jor-
dan, during which he visited the
Simula area which was the target
of the Israeli retaliation raid and
the Arab refugee camps.
He also told the newsmen
that he had always opposed the
use of United Nations Relief
and Works Agency funds for
refugees receiving training from
the "Palestine Liberation Organ-
ization," and that he continued
to do so "after visiting the
camps."
The Senator met with the press
after an hour meeting with Prem-
ier Levi Bshkol in the Premier's
office. The Senator called the
meeting "frank and useful." Later,
he planted a tree in Ihe forest on
the outskirts of Jerusalem named
after his brother, the late Pres-
ident John F. Kennedy.
Then he paid a visit to the Had
assah Hospital Reception Center,
also named tor the late President.
Ihe Senator then had lunch with
Foreign Minister Abba Eban and
later left for Rehovot where he
visited the Weizmann institute.
Good-Will Cruise Greeted Warmly
Members of the Miami Israel
"Chai" Good-Will Cruise have re-
ceived the warm blessings of the
.epresentatives of foreign govern-
ments stationed in Miami. The oc-
casion was a reception tendered by
Luis De Bayle, dean of Miami's
Consular Corps, and member of
:he corps, last Sunday afternoon
at the El Flamenco Supper Club.
The Miami Israel "Chai" Good-
will Cruise aboard Israel's flag-
ship, the SS Shalom, will embark
on an eight-day voyage from Miami
on Jan. 6. Ports of call will include
San Juan, St. Thomas and St.
Maarten, where heads of respec-
tive governments will entertain
the members of the cruis in official
exchanges of good-will. Some 200
members of the cruise attended
the reception tendered by De Bayle
and the Consular Corps.
Senior consul in the Miami area
remarked that the late Ambassa-
dor De Leasepa Morrison. Ambas-
sador of the Organization of Amer-
ican States, came from Washing-
Ion to launch the initial Pan Amer-
ican Friends of Good-Will Cruise
in 1961. He noted that that tour
"created a stir in all the countries
visited," and felt that the forth-
Brown Appointed
To Railroad Post
Norman E. Brown, a Miami re-
sident for 25 years, has been ap-
pointed city passenger and ticket
agent for the Seaboard Railroad
Co. here, according to an an-
nouncement by W. J. Ficht. gen-
eral passenger agent for the com-!
pany.
Brown joined the Seaboard Lines
in 1941. He has held poitions in all
phases of railroad activity.
COMMERCIAL FRATERNAL
POLITICAL
PRINTING
and OFFSET
III ENGLISH YIDDISH
HEBREW SPANISH
Specializing in Bar Mitivah
Wedding Ini/ilationi
(Union Shop)
Parness Press
437 S.W. 17th Avenue, Miami
FR 9-8235
coming cruise "will have equal Im-
port"
Members of the Good-Will Cruise
were presented with pins emble-
t mafic of their membership in the
i National Society of Honorees of ls-
' rael. The gold pins feature an em-
bossed figure of the lion of Israel
across the background of the seal
of Israel.
The Miami Israel "Chai" Good-
Will Cruise will take place under
the auspices of the .Miami Israel
Bond Organization.
I
vfttcss Syfflfxrtluj
and Cornet
p*95owasI
u'i
iTdf^otifGnrtlfns
MIAMI MIAMI BEACH
CORAL GABLES HOLLYWOOD
FT. LAUOERDALE BOCA RATON
TWIN CITY GLASS CO.
tUARANTtlD MIRRORS -STORt fRONTS fURNIJURl TOPS
ANTIQUE MIRRORS & RE-SILVERING
Plate & Window Glass Replacements
1270 16th Street, M.B. Closed Saturdays Tel. 534-2967
Reporting on his visit to Jor-
dan, where he spent a day in
consultation with King Hussein
and in visits to the refugee
camps, he said here that he had
found "great human misery in
the camps."
He deplored the United States
decision to cut its contributions
to the UNRWA budget and said he
would raise that issue on his re-
turn to the United States with the
goal of achieving restoration of the
UNRWA budget.
Membei :
National FHinerul
l Hrevtorfl Awn
Plortda Funeral
I Mrectora Anan.
J.I-M'.A.
865-2353
720 Seventy tint Sir ft
ol 1*6v" C-wl Drrrs
on AWi Iroch
Weltner graduated from Oglc-
thorpe University, where his
father, Dr. Philip WeMner, served
as the university's president. Up-
on graduating from Columbia Law
School in 1950. he entered the
practice of law in Atlanta, after
serving for two years as a first
lieutenant in the U.S. Army.
First elected to Congress in
1962. he was the only southern con-
gressman to vote for the 1964 civil
rights bill. As a member of the
House Un-American Activities
Committee, he succeeded in bring-
ing about a probe of the Ku Klux
Klan.
Early this year, he wrote a
book. "Southerner," which deals
with the problems of the South.
Following his withdrawal from the
congressional race in October.
Speaker of the House John Mc
Cormack called him "one of the
bravest men I have ever met in all
my years in public life."
Lakeside
MEMORIAL PARR
AND
GARDEN MAUSOLEUM
"THE SOUTHS
MOST BEAUTIFUL
JEWISH CEMETERY"
Guaranteed Perpetual Care Fund
N.W. 25th ST. at 103rd AVE.
TU 5-1689
"Pedlock and Son," a book by
Stephen Longstrect. was to be re-
viewed before members of the Star
Chapter of City of Hope on Thuis-
daj noon in the Community Room
or the Treasure House North. 7525
E. Treasure Dr.. North Bay Vil-
lage. Mrs. Edith Jacobson is re
viewer.
Palmer
Memorials
"Miami's Only
Jewish
Monument
Builders"
LEADERS IN
SERVICE, QUALITY
AND value:
Scheduled Unveilings
SUNDAY, DEC. 11, 1966
Aif. Ncbo Cemetery
SAUL EDELMAN, 2 p.m.
Rabbi Maxwell Bei
Vista Memorial Park
CHARLES ADIER, 2:30 p.m.
Rabbi Moi n K
SEE WHAT YOU BUY I
DO NOT BUY FROM
MAIL ORDER FIRMS
AND BE SORRY!
Buy Direct from the
Manufacturer in Miami
and save many dollars.
PALM KITS
MIAMI MONUMENT CO.
Miami's Only
Jewish Mtnument Builders
3279 S.W. 8th Street
HI 4-0921 Phones HI 4-0922
FREE!
PERSONAL CHECKING SERVICE
for Persons 65 years or older
Phone for Bank-By-Mail Material
PEOPLES FIRST NATIONAL
BANK OF MIAMI SHORES
Complete Trull Facilities
Northeast Sad Av*. ol 95th Street
Miami Shores. Florida
Telephone 757-SSIl
PEOPLES AMERICAN
NATIONAL
BANK OF NORTH MIAMI
Northeast 115th St. at 10th Avo.
North Miami, Florida
Telephone 751-6611
PEOPLES FIRST NATIONAL
BANK
OF NORTH MIAMI BEACH
Won Dixie Highway at 162nd Street
North Miami Beach. Florida
Telephone 94S-431I
PEOPLES NATIONAL BANK
OF COMMERCE
Northwest 79th St. at 33rd Aye.
Miami. Florida
Telephone 6*6-0700
PEOPLES LIBERTY
NATIONAL
BANK OF NORTH MIAMI
Norlhwe.t 7th Av*. at 1 35th Jt.
North Miami, Florida t
Telephone 615-2444
PEOPLES NATIONAL BANK
OF BAY HARBOR ISLANDS
9S00 Bay Harbor Terrace
(Off Kane Concoune, Miami Beach)
ay Harbor Islands, Florida
Telephone S66-6266
Combined Resources in excess $73,000,000.00
MFMBMS: FEOERAl DtPOill INSURANCE CORPORATION-FEOERAl RESERVE SYSTEM
When you buy more
life insurance
stop and think first.
Eliot M. Daniels, C.L.U.
Representative
MIAMI
Tel: 371-6645
Let's say you've decided to invest an extra $200 a
year in life insurance. What's the next step?
Careful now. Don't just order "another $10,000."
That's like buying a house without seeing it first.
A house has to fit your family, your family activi-
ties, your future plans.
So does your insurance program. Your problem
Is to fit that extra $200 worth into your overall
plan for financial security and growth. Should you
spend it on more family protection today ? Or on
providing cash for a child's education fifteen years
from now? Or on a retirement fund for yourself?
Or on a combination of these?
You can see how, without help, planning such a
program can be complicated. But there is help.
Your Manufacturers Life underwriter has an ingenious device called a Security
Graph, which systematically pictures your overall financial position and objec-
tives, and then indicates where that $200 will do the best job.
This is part of our Financial Planning Service for which there is no charge. So
call your Man from Manufacturers soon.
MANUFACTURERS LIFE
INSURANCE COMPANY
14A-66

Pagel2-A
i Jbwj
Friday. December 3. 1966
Miami Beach Chapter. Women's League for Israel, celebrates
Dr. Abraham Wolfson's 85th birthday at Washington Federal.
Front row (left to right) are Mrs. Scrah Kunin. Mrs. Emma Rat-
r.er. Mrs. Rose Hoch;tem, Mrs. Viola Minkoff. Mrs. Elizabeth
Richman, Mrs. Alex Dellerson, program vice president; Mrs.
Harry Kapell, president and sister of the honored guest; Mrs.
Edwin Niman. New York, his dauahter; Mrs. Birdie Zahler. his
niece; Mrs. Jack Kahn. another sister; Mrs. Leah Udell and
Mis. Tanya Wolthin. Froaram featured Mn>. Fanuie Gold-
s'ein, who offered several piano selections, and Mrs. Udell,
who presented original poems. As a tribute to Israel's 13th
anniversary, the League has scheduled a Chanuka latke and
card parly for Friday, Dec. 16, 12:30 p.m., at Chase Federal.
425 Aithur Godfrey Rd. Mrs. Udell and Mrs. Morris Schor are
in charge of reservations.
DURING THE WEEK ... AS I SEE IT
'Jewish Books9Need Clear Definition
Continued from Page 4-A
its Jewish hero. "The Fixer" is
Jewish again despite him.
The problem is that once the
American Jewish writer's past
has been discovered and exposed
in his artistic experience, he is no
longer specifically Jewish. "Her-
zog," as an example, illustrates
the point best We are not in
this novel concerned with a Jew,
but with a depressingly neurotic
human being who merely hap-
pens to be Jewish. Hence, Her-
zog, himself, is not only the anti-
hero; he is the anti-Jew. And
this is precisely what most "Jew-
ish literature" in America has
been about during the past
decade.
Joyce, Proust and Mann, the
triad of twentieth centuiy gen-
ius in the novel, all used Jews
s heroes in the sense that they
(Bloom, Swann. Naphta) could
Symbolize the exile, the man in-
creasingly separated from him-
self and without, so to speak, a
spiritual country. Hemingway, in
"The Sun Also Rises." exploited
this technique in Robert Cohn,
who became a foil for the lost
generation typified by Lady Brett
and her impotent lover.
DH BECOMING WRTERS WHO
tRt INCIDENTALLY JEWISH
B
UT THE DECLINE in America
of the sociologically-hyphen-
ated life, where Jews looked
upon themselves as Jews trans-
ported to a new nation from the
Old World and where, at least for
a while, America remained inci-
dental to the force of their tra-
ditional cultural momentum, sim-
ilarly spelled the decline of the
Jew as symbolic of exile. What
Saul Bellow seems about today
makes him (and "Herzog") no
more Jewish than Hemingway
and "Sun" were.
What he seems about in the
first place is to capitalize on the
general American fascination
with the Jewish intellect, wheth-
er it be in art, on the college
campus, criticism or science. The
fascination may stem from a
variety of reasons peculiar to the
Gentile sensibility and unrelated
to the problem here; but, for his
part, "Herzog" primarily demon-
strates Bellow's determination to
prove his literary capability de-
spite his Jewishness, not because
of it. It suggests the Jewish writ-
er's desire to be recognized as
an American on his own terms |
to reach beydnd his recogni- j
tion as an elite or even exotic j
being.
To return to the beginning:
The ultimate end for American
Jewish writers is that they will |
inevitably become writers who
are incidentally Jewish. British
or French or Russian writers are
writers seen in terms of their
nationality. Also seen in these i
terms. Judaism has until recently !
Gordon Chairs Schools Confab
Jack D. Gordon, president of
Washington Federal Savings and
Loan Association of Miami B",nth.
was chairman of the National Con-
ference of State Legislators cor.-
?ening on Sunday in Washington.
The conference, which brought
together 400 legislative leaders
from every state, is sponsored by
the National Committee for Sup
port of the Public Schools, of which
Gordon is secretary-treasurer and
a member of the executive com-
mittee.
Funded by a grant from the
Ford Foundation, the conference
brought state legislators involved
in planning and allocating the edu-
cation appropriations in each
state.
Gordon, who is serving his sec-
ond term as a member of the Dade
County Board of Public Instruc-
tion, has been a leader in planning
quality education and fiscal
policies for the nation's seventh
largest public school system.
Call 534-2141
1 NEWEST, FINEST NAME IN KOSHER RESORTS <

SHARPN-
IES0RTS (
few who 4>U
\ 0
v-rf Exciting, elegant, enticing...for the few
appreciate specialized service! Pool, Cabanas
t Private Beach, free Lounges, free Parking, T.V
Radio each Room, nightly Entertainment.
Tf /-We only look expensive!
^ OCEANFRONT at 20th St. Miami Beach, Fla.
Mod.
mericon Plan
ftr Pt,
DH Occ I
10 el
105 Raami
been a nationality. It is less so
today because the American Jew-
ish writer, at least at this time,
aims largely to depress the dif-
ferences that set him off from
others. His metier is the anti-
story, the anti-hero, the anti-Jew.
It will not be that at all tomor-
row. If it is, then the anti-Semite
shall have again had h's way. for
the Jewish writer shall have
once again become artificially
sensitized to what is after all
only his religious exclusivity
not a national exclusivity. (No-
where, in all our frenzied search
for the "Jewish writer" and the
"Jewish novel," have we ever
suggested that it is a religious
writer or a religious novel we
are after).

LONGING TO DISCOVER
OLD ETHNIC THEMES
IJNTIL Book Month speakers
** make these points with
intelligence and understanding.
Kosygin Vows
Emigration Easing
Continued from Page 1-A
about reunification of families.
There is not a single country in
the world which found a solution
to the problem of interior nations
as did the Soviet Union. We have
in the Soviet Union very many na-
tions and all of them are equal.
We take care of the interests of
all nations represented in the So-
viet Union. This concerns Jews as
well as all the others."
The question posed to the
Soviet Premier about arranging
a Middle East peace conference
referred to the peace talks ar-
ranged by the Soviet Union in
Tashkent between India and
Pakistan which brought a cease-
fire in the war between those
two countries.
Replying to the question, Prem-
ier Kosygin said: "There is no
question of a Tashkent conference
for the Middle East. You must un-
derstand that there can be such
a conference only in case that both
sides, that means both belligerents,
would agree on such a conference.
This is impossible in the Middle
East because there they do not
want it."
they will never be talking about
Jewish books in America, but
only longing to discover old eth-
nic themes in a new setting,
which is an aesthetic impossibil-
ity. Or else, they will have to
turn to martyrology, or to Jewish
literature of the past, or to Is-
raeli writing, which is of course
patently national. In this context,
finally, it must be understood
that the chroniclers of the mar-
tyrs are not Americans, as are
the I. B. Singers among us also
not American from the literary
point of view. Singer, in fact, is
the last of the ghetto souls, the
historian of a worla now gone
and dead.
As for Israel, no Jewish Book
Month would seem to be needed
there at all not, at least, as
we know it in the American
synagogue.
Chanuka Festival
At Miami T
A Chanuka Festival, will be held
on Saturday, 7 p.m., in the Ball-
room of the YM and WHA of
Greater Miami. 8500 SW 8th St.
The program will feature "Y:'
members of all ages, II wit] open
with a dramatic choral reading en-
titled the "Meaning of Chanuka
presented by the Junior lliih The-
ater Workshop Group.
Candlel'ghtins ceremony will in-
clude leaders of all "Y" activities.
The program also will featu e
humorous skits. Special awards
will be presented.
List of soloists on the program
includes Bonnie Hertz, singer and
guitarist; Barbara Glason. song
stylist; Asher Stem, monologue;
Kim Gordon, song and dance;
Philip Naskin. monologi-.e. Molly
Roe, songs; Charles Weinstein,
monologue; Isabelle Gonshak,
Soprano soloist: Esther Stem, comi-
cal monologue: Jack Friedenn,
Gert Krasnow. Wilfred Rose,
Blanche Reisman. humorous skit.
Latke and other refreshments
will be served following trie enter
tainment. The latke were donated
by Sand-Ell catering.
SAND-ELL
KOSHER CATERERS
Undtr Rabbinical Sepem'siee
BAR MITZVAHS
WEDDINGS PARTIES
Specieliziae in Home Caferiaf
mm4 Hotel Work
SOL WEISS
866-6226
IF NO ANSWER DIAl
S6*-S?7i
1216 NORMANDY DRIVE, M.B.
biSfeCM Men MM/iliti:.Vf
Open Daily 4-9:30 P.M.
Now Featuring
KOSHER TAKE-OUT SPECIALTIES
940 -71st ST., MB. 864-6043
!
Continental m Kosher Caterers
WEDDINGS
BAR MITZVAHS
BANQUETS UNIIMITED I
At Your Home, Hall or Synogogue
Miami's Only "Sbomer Shabbos" Restaurant Quality Par Excellence
j 8393 BIRD ROAD, MIAMI Phone 226-1744

Friday. December 9, 1966
Jen 1st FIcrM/an
Page 13-A
Women to Hear Labor Authority
Sidney Lens, author, traveler,
i and authority on the American
j labor movement, was to speak on
'Latin American Revolt" to mem-
bers of the Women's International
League for Peace and Freedom on
Thursday, Dec. 8, in the Starlight
Room of the Biscayne Terrace Ho-
tel. Session was to begin at 8 p.m.
Besides writing numerous books
and contributing articles to maga-
zines including the Yale Review.
| New Leader, and Harper's Bazaar.
Lens has visited over 81 countries
in the last 12 years. He has served
Learning the story of Chanuka, children at
the Temple Emanu-El Solomon Schechter Day
School light a Chanuka Menorah. They are
Shelley Lipschitz, Ira Badtwald, Ycel Ynnich,
Jeffrey Kirschenbcum, Lisa Fred, Jay Adler
and Sarah Rubinstein.
Extremists Issue Manifesto
Continued from Page 1-A
Foint ten puts the NDP on record as 'de-.
maniling" an ?end to the lie about sole German
responsibility whereby thousands of millions of
money fias been extorted from our nation." The
party has called for an immediate end to such demonstration.
compensation payments.
Meanwhile protests against the extremist
Nat'onal Democratic Party continued in West
Germany, A group of 4.000 young people march-
ed through the streets of Hamburg in such a
Students from the four corners of the world attending the
Hebrew Academy join hands to symbolize world unity as they
jointly light the first Chanuka candle. Left to right aie Debbie
Lieberman, North Miami Beach, Fla., USA (North America);
Benjamin Flint, Bogota, Colombia (South America); Yafla
Segal. Tel Aviv, Israel (Asia); and Shira Rackovsky, Sidney
(Australia).
Gifts to Children At Chanuka Party
Congregation of Temple Tifer-
eth Israel will hold its annual
Chanuka party on Sunday, Dec. 11,
(sorting with a luncheon at 12:30
p.m.
Hebrew and Sunday School
students will participate in the
entertainment, and there will be
dancing to a live band and com-
munity singing.
Gifts will be given to every child
present.
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
from
< utlor Hidge
Bowling Lanes
Itostaurant
WHY COOK AT HOME?
LET MINNIE
COOK FOR YOU!
ALL YOU
CAN EAT
$1.25
BUFFET EVERY TUESDAY
6:30 P.M. TIL ? ? ?
ROBERTS
COFFEE SHOP
Extends Chanuka
Greetings to All
3680 N.W. 54h STREET
Phone 633-3006
AIMEE and
EDUARDO
of the
Shadows
extend greetings
to all
BROAD CAUSEWAY
at BISCAYNE BLVD.
Telephone 751-5621
ISAAC GELLIS Restaurant and Delicatessen
erving The Best in Fine Kosher Foods
A FULL LINE OF ISAAC GELLIS DELICATESSEN FOODS
1141 Washington Ave., Miami Beach 534-2655
CHANUKA GREETINGS
NICK & ANTOINETTES
BXESTA1 RANT
1624 N.E. 1st Court Phone 374-2080
as one of the 32 peace candidates
I for Congress in the 1962 campaign.
Tired of shopping from
store to store?
IET
HASSEN'S
DELIVER YOUR FOOD TO THE
DOOR en CA
2 Servings 5 Days **
Plus Del. & Sales Tax
German American Cooking
Call fir Menu
HASSEN'S
HOME CATERING
2980 N.W. 7th St.
635-9716 634-9967
MORRIS 8. RUTH LERNER Catering for All Occasions
HARRY ZUCKERMAN Established in 1945 *'
Famous
671 WASHINGTON AVE.
JE 1-3987
MIAMI
FACILITIES BEACH
J^esfaurant
VOW OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
Heart Disease
Srssisn at Cedars
A three-day discussion on heart
dla ise, its causes and treatment
will be sponsored by the Cardiolo-
gy Department of Cedars of Leb-
anon Iio.-pital on Dec. 15 to 17,
it was announced by hospital
president, Harry I.. Lewis.
Principal discussion leader at
the sessions will be Dr. Richard
Gorlin. assistant professor of med-
icine at Harvard University Med-
ical School, and director of the
Cardiova-cular Laboratory at Peter
Bent Brigham Hospital in Boston.
The final Saturday morning ses-
sion. 9 to 11 a.m.. will be a com-
bined clinical conference with the
cardiology section of the Univer-
sity of Miami Medical School, and
will be held at Jackson Memorial
Hospital.
EL IS AT I'It IIO SPANISH RESTAURANT
Specialty of the House
"PAEUA VAIENCIANA"
OPEN 11 A.M Til 10 P.M. DAILY
2322 N.W. 7th STREET, MIAMI Phono NE 3-9494
China Maid RESTAURANT
9040 BIRO ROAD PHONE 226-0331
DAILY 3:00-10:00SUN. 1:00-9:00CLOSED TUESDAY
JUNIOR HONG, Your Congenial Host
AUTHENTIC CHINESE DINING IN MIAMI
COMPLETE TAKE OUT MENU
.:.
ITALIAN AMERICAN RESTAURANT

rw-*mv-r 10CR
Friday, December 9, 1966
* if w #sf Mr r idle* n
Page 15-A
Neo-Nazi Successes Worry Eban
Continued from Page 1-A
who said that Germany was on
the way back to Nazism was
doing "this small party" a favor
it did not deserve. He stressed
that the development was the
emergence of neo-Nazis and not
an increase in their strength. He
declared that the NDP had pro-
vided a new rallying point for
Germany's neo-Nazis but that
they had always existed in an
undercover motion.
The Foreign Minister made his
remarks in reply to a motion for
Knesset debate on the issue offer-
ed by Mrs. E. 'Palmi of Mapam.
Mrs. Talmis motion was trans-
mitted to the Foreign Affairs and
Security Committee for further
study.
Shimon Peres, secretary general
of former Prime Minister David
Ben-Gurion's dissident Israel
Workers Party, also commented
on the issue. Mr. Peres expressed
the opinion that more attention
should be given to the fact that 92
percent of West Germans did not
Students Offer
Holiday Program
Monday, 8 p.m., has been set
lor the annual Chanuka party of
the Beth Jacob Sisterhood to be
held in the Whitman Social Hall,
311 Washington Ave.
Students in the Talmud Torah,
will present ja. Chanuka program
followed by a candlelight cere-
mony, and a musical selections by
Cantor Maurice Mamches.
vote for the extremist National
Democratic Party in the elections
in Hesse and Bavaria. The Kafi
dffical. a former Deputy Defense
Minister, said that the German ma
Joritjf sAmild be encouraged
against the neo-Naris.
Generally, Israel reacted calmly
disregarding Kiesinger's admitted
Nazi past in the expectation that
he would generally follow the
same policies toward Israel as
those of his predecessors.
Asher Ben-Nathan, Israel's
first ambassador to Bonn, home
for a brief visit to discuss with
Israeli officials Hie West Ger-
man political change-over, said
he had "grounds for believing"
that the Klesinger government
would show "understanding" of
the problems "mutual to Israel
and West Germany."
Peres added that "we will judge
Kiesinger and his government on
the merits of their deeds, not their
past record." He remarked that
in some cases, the origins of rec-
ords about Germans during the
I Nazi era was dubious.
Willi Brandt, the former West
Berlin mayor who fought in the
resistance movement against the
Nazis, was named Foreign Minis-
ter. He was expected to try to
maintain present West German-
Israeli relations while seeking to
improve relations with the Arab
countries which were ruptured by
the Arab Governments in response
to West Germany's recognition of
Israel.
A normalization of those rela-
i lions by the new Government was
i predicted by King Hussein of Jor-
] dan in an interview with the Ger-
man Press Agency.
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
TO ALL
ST I ART
PROPERTIES,
INC
Harold Sehres Louis Alweis
Sheldon Leider
1451 E. 10th AVE.
Hialeah
TU 5-3831
Happy Chanuka to my
many friends and clients
M. R. FITTCH
REALTOR
"Better Class Homes
Since 1923"
975 Arthur Godfrey Road
JE 8-1843 Miami Beach
A Happy Chanuka to All
from
BILL, HERMAN
and MORRIS
KALER PRODUCE
COMPANY. INC.
2121 N. W. 13th Atmim
Phone 374-4174
Happy Holiday Greetings
MsriNcrrvi work
F0 THE OftCRfMfNATtN*
UPHOLSTERING
REFINISHING
DRAPERIES
on our premises
Miehele
interior*
800 1st Street, Miami Beach
538-7069
HAPPY HOLIDAY
From
MAM rue R.
TALRERT
325 Vi ALCAZAR AVE.
Coral Gables, Florida
A HAPPY
CHANUKA TO ALL
Sol Megfoll
REALTOR
605 LINCOLN ROAD
Phono IE 8-8551
TO ALL
HAPPY HOLIDAYS
RELEMA
iNC.
LADIES DRESSES
2822 N. MIAMI AVE.
Dial 373-9725
BELEMA S. KERN, President
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
KELLY SPRINGFIELD TIRES
Distributor
Blake Tire Co.
VAUGHN BLAKE
CY MINTZ
2007 S.W. 67th AVENUE
Ph. 661-4495
CHANUKA GREETINGS
CAROLINE'S
MASSAGE
STEAM
1519 Washington Ave.
Miami Beach 538-1785
8 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Holiday Greetings from
Whilv House
Rpautu Sat on
Under New Management
1455 Ocean Dr., MVemi Beach
PHONE JE 1-6483
All Work Done by
Experienced Operators
Walter Margaret Dorothy
TO ALL MY FRIENDS
IN THE GREATER MIAMI
JEWISH COMMUNITY .
I EXTEND MY SINCERE
GOOD WISHES FOR A
K^Jlappu C_^/mm
w
Dick Fincher
HAPPY CHANUKA TO ALL
THE HUNTINGTON BUILDING
168 S.E. 1st Street Miami, Florid*
CONVENIENT DOWNTOWN OFFICES
for PROFESSIONAL and BUSINESS MEN
YEAR-ROUND WEATHER CONDITIONING
#y<
CAU
Management Company
REALTORS
FR 1-3592 234 Biacayne Blvd. Miami. Fla.
HOLIDAY GREETINGS TO ALL from
Jack D. Birnbaum Robert G. Hockmuth
NEW YORK LIFE
THE NEW YORK LIFE AGENT IN YOUR COMMUNITY
IS A GOOD MAN TO KNOW
532-4040
445-7703
947-6281
CHANUKA GREETINGS
roffler rarrers
"for people who care"
2824 PONCE DE LEON BLVD. CORAL GABIES, FLORIDA
5105 S. DIXIE HIGHWAY WEST PALM, FLORIDA
HOLIDAY GREETINGS from MR. YOUNG'S
>IOlPi:il\ BKAITY SAI.OX
"We'd love to get our hands into your hair."
872 N.E. 125th St. Open 9 til 9
Phone 757-6941
HAPPY CHANUKA from
Dysart Swimming Pool Service
"NO FUN IN A DIRTY POOL"
1436 Alton Rd., Miami Beach 531-5069
6150 N.E. 4th Ave. 751-6526
Anello Painting Co,
Roof Cleaning and Roof Painting
18164 N.W. 2nd Ave., Miami, Fla.
Tel. 635-9545

maav. i*pemh!in 1QRR
A 1(/<
oman s
"World
tJfewisJIi Floridian
Miami, Florida, Friday, December 9, 1966
Section B
Hadassah's Henrietta Szold Feted
Miami Beach Chapter of Hadassah, in celebration of Jewish
Book Month, is shown donating to the Central Jewish Library
of the Bureau of Jewish Education some rare Hebrew volumes.
Termed "Tarbuth," the gift consists of a complete Hebrew
encyclopedia of 16 volumes illustrated in color. This constitutes
the first part of the gift of the Miami Beach Chapter to the
Bureau's Central Library in a projected annual library assist-
ance program. Left to right are Mrs. Henry B. Wernick, pres-
ident, Miami Beach Chapter of Hadassah, turning the collec-
tion over to Louis Schwartman, executive director, Bureau of
Jewish Education; Mrs. Barnett Beckerman, education chair-
man and vice president of Hadassah; Mrs. Bernard Lipson,
Founder's Day chairman; and Mrs. Manning Mintus, publicity
chairman.
.., 0
n
j
by ISABEL GROVE
All proceeds from the Henrietta
Szold Day luncheons being held by
the Miami Beach Chapter of Ha-
dassah units during December will
be applied to the establishment
of the new Cancer Research
Building which will house the
Moshe Sharett Institute of Oncol-
ogy in Hadassah's City of Science
Medical Center in Israel.
t *
Mrs. Jack Miller, vocational ed-
ucation chairman, has announced
that the Miami Beach Chapter is
launching its second in the book
review series on Tuesday, 1:30
p.m., at the Algiers Hotel. Mrs.
Arthur A. Pekelner, leadership
training consultant of Florida Re-
gion of Hadassah, will review
"Bring My Sons from Far," by
Ralph Lowenstein,
The Bihle Study Group second
session will be held on Saturday,
12:30 p.m., at the home of Mrs.
Eva Blum, 4747 Collins Ave. Mrs.
Sanford Jacobson, chairman of
Bible Study Group, will discuss
the "Psalms."
a
Bay Harbor Group will hold its
regular luncheon meeting on Mon-
day, 11:30 a.m., at the Balmoral
Hotel. Afternoon will include a
candlelighting ceremony in tribute
to Chanuka, the birthday of Hen-
rietta Szold, founder of Hadassah,
and a film. Mrs. Joseph Epstein
is president.
a
Deborah Group will hold its
regular meeting on Monday, 1
p.m., at the Mimosa Apts.. 4747
Collins Ave. After a brief business
meeting, cards will follow, with in-
struction on pam by Mrs. Louis
Gidney and Mrs. Sandy Fine. Mrs.
Charles Gertler is president.
*
Forte Towers Group will hold
its regular monthly meeting on
Monday, 7:30 p.m., at the North
Building Auditorium. A special
Chanuka program will be present-
ed. Mrs. Frances Sass is president.
* t.
Israeli Group will hold its reg-
ular luncheon meeting on Monday
noon at the Algiers Hotel. Follow-
ing the candlelighting ceremony in
honor of Chanuka, there will be
a musical program led by Mrs.
Tibor H. Stern. Mrs. Milton Sirkin
will be guest speaker. Mrs. Joseph
Meyer is president.
* *
Emma Lazarus Group will hold
its regular monthly meeting on
Continued on Page S-B
''"I "V IW!W|llll||l|l||t||!l'H 'i;-|..|||"TM'! '!:": ...........IffllfM
i
Unique feature of the wedding
which united the former Flor-
ence Peppi Hausman and Donald
F. Widenhouse on Sunday after-
noon, Nov. 27, was the anniver-
sary cake presented to the bride's
aunt and uncle. Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Hausman. of Baltimore.
IMi celebrating 27 years of to-
getherness Nuptials for the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ben
Hausman, of N. Bay Village, and
the son of Mr. and Mrs. M. G.
Widenhouse, Midland, N.C., held
at Temple Israel with Rabbi Jos-
eph Narot officiating Among
the large group of out-of-town
relatives here from the groom's
home town were the Marvin Wid-
enhouses, Gail Widenhouse, Mr.
and Mrs. Howard Hartzell and
Don Morgan Also from
Maryland came I .or- Hausman,
Adelphi, Mrs. II. Alper, Silver
Spring, Mrs. J. Rose. Rose Haven,
and Jack Gelrud, Lexington Park
. Mrs. Billie Kremer, Mrs. L.
Resnick and Don Epstein are
residents of Washington, D.C.
... Gil Kitt is a Chicagoan, Mr.
and Mrs. A. P. Feldman, of Ak
ron, and Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Gold-
stein, of Cleveland, owe their
allegiance to Ohio, and James
Kenneth Feldman calls W. Hart-
ford, Conn., home.
e *
That old saw which refers to
the efficiency of busy people cer-
tainly applies to Lillian Chasin,
who has been upped to a vice
presidency of the Peoples Amer-
ican National Bank of North Mi-
ami after being with them a
mere five years Fortunately,
by her own admission, the inde-
fatigable Lil requires very little
sleep for among her activities
with local and civic groups she
serves as publicity chairman of
the Miami Chapter of Hadassah,
notifications chairman of the Na-
tional Association of Bank Wom-
en, recording secretary and di-
rector of the South Florida Youth
Symphony, active on the cultural
committee of the City of North
Miami Beach, and member of the
North Miami Beach Chamber of
Commerce ... In addition she's
wife and mother in a Sky Lake
home for husband Norman, and
two teen-agers, I.arry 16 and
Ellen 13.
* ft
Over 400 Morton Towerites and
friends piled into eight buses re-
cently for the trip to the Dcau-
Continued on Page 14-B
happy
holidays
'
All of us
at Burdine's
extend our greetings
for a
Happy Chanukah
to you
and yours
-:,i
'-'I

-S
r*
'Hawaii1 Opener For NCJW Section
Anticipating a successful Hebrew University
Women's Division luncheon Dec. 15 at the
Fontainebleau Hotel are (left to right) Mes-
dames Florence W. Koot, Nathan Nash, Jack
Katzman, PhiUp F. Thau, Fannie Goldberg,
Frances Entine, and Oida C. Rubin.
Hebrew University Women Expect Large
Attendance at Luncheon Set for Dec. 15
Greater Miami Women's Division
of the American Friends of the
Hebrew University announce a
record-breaking attendance for
their Woman of the Year Lunch-
eon on Thursday, Dec. 15, at the
Fontainebleau Hotel.
According to Mrs. Philip F.
Thau, president, there will be rep-
resentation from Greater Miami
ship of Mrs. Dorothy Krieger Fink,
will include a special English pres-
entation trom the opera "Martha,"
with guest artists from the Opera
Guild of Greater Miami.
Dr. Irving Lehrman, of Temple
Emanu-El, will present Mrs. Katz-
man with .a specially hancl-illum-
State of Israel Bonds, "inasmuch j inated scro prepared by lhe noted
as the honoree, Mrs. Jack Katz- ] artist, Irving Billig. Mrs. Trudy
El Sisterhood, Hebrew Academy
Women's Auxiliary, Technion
Women's Division, Hadassah and
A midnight luau on Lincoln Rd.,
the first such function ever to be
held on the Mall, will be the grand
finale of Greater Miami Section
of National Council of Jewish
Women's annual theatre party toi
be held on Wednesday evening,
Dec. 21.
Festivities will begin at 8:15
p.m., when 700 people will be
ushered into the Colony Theatre
for the premiere showing of the
film. "Hawaii," based on the novel
by James Michener and starring
lulls Andrews, Max Von Sydow;
and Richard Harris.
Following the film, ticket-hold-
ers will be guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Alexander Muss for the luau,:
which will be held under a tent on
the Mall in front of the theatre.'
Hors d'oevres and a rum punch,
catered by the Luau Restaurant.,
will be served by colorfully garbed
waiters.
Funds from the theatre parly
will go to benefit Council's serv-
ices. Mrs. Burton Goldberg is spe-
i cial events chairman, and Mrs.
Edwin Oppenheim is president ot
! Greater Miami Section.
man. has played an active role in
these many organizations."
Events in preparation for the
luncheon have been held in the
Jewish Federation, the Bureau of *ome* of ThaU *? Walt"
Kirschner, Mrs. Leo Robinson, and
in the office of the American
Jewish Education, the Miami
Beach Symphony Society, Mt. Sinai ,
Auxiliary, Cedars of Lebanon Aux- I **"* tF?e "!brew Unlvers,,>'
iliary. Young Women's and Young
Men's Hebrew Association, Jewish
Home for Aged, Temple Emanu-
at 605 Lincoln Rd.
Program for the gala luncheon,
which will be under the chairman-
Hamerschlag, vice president of
the Greater Miami Women's Div-
ision, will make the invocation.
Past recipients of the Woman
of the Year Award, Mrs. Anna
Brenner Meyers. Mrs. Inez Kren-
sky, and Mrs. Samuel Simonhoff.
will participate in the luncheon.
Mrs. Jennie Grossinger was the
first Woman of the Year in 1962.
CHANUKA GREETINGS
FROM
ANNA & AARON SAVRAN
Who Are Back Operating
SAVRAN BAKERY
UN 6-8982
7423 Collins Avenue
Chanuka Supper For Dads. Tots
Men's Club of Temple Menorah i fathers will meet separately to
will sponsor a special Chanuka hear an address by Morton Perry,
supper for fathers and children of j of the Dade State Attorney's Of-
the Religious School on Wedncs- fice. Perry, who prosecuted the
day, 6 p.m., in the temple social
hall.
After supper, the Merry-Go-
Voegt Case, will speak on "Crime
in Your Neighborhood."
The club will round out the
Round Players will present the, evening by presenting to each
classic "Rumpelstiltskin" for the j child an appropriate Chanuka
children. At the same time, the present.
Those Planning to Attend the
18th YEAR OF ISRAEL DINNER to be given by
THE RELIGIOUS ZIONISTS OF AMERICA
MIZRACHI HAPOEL HAMIZRACHI
December 18th at the Deauville Hotel
are requested to
SEND IN THEIR RESERVATIONS IMMEDIATELY
OR PHONE JE 8-1152
The Committee
SIMCHAS
There
Three days of festivities marked
the inauguration of the new Knesset
building, perched temple-like
on Givat (Hill of) Ram in Jerusalem.
6,000 guests, including
representatives from 44 parliaments,
attended the opening ceremony,
one of the happiest national events
since Independence itself.
and here Yuban makes a Simcha!
The premium
coffee of
Genera' Foods
Yuban's flavor is so rich and rare that
every cup is a happy occasion in itself.
No other coffee can give your family and friends
the matchless pleasure of Yuban
The Simcha coffee o
K Certified Kosher Parve by Rabbi Bernard Levy
about
gathered for you
Miriam Held
Tliis (admittedly subjective) critic I*
awarding a galaxy of golden stars i
every Yiddish show in town, (I'm sorry,
dear lion-New York readers, about thee
'regional' references.') Musical com-
edy, lively vaudeville and movie 'greats'
are playing 10 packed houses on Second
Avenue and on Broadway itself. So lak e
your choice and take your children. Let
themlor a Chanukali treattaste the
rich unique untranslatable flavor oj '*
ylddish voil.'
C^ntertaining ideas:
Now how arc >ou going to enleruu*.
your Chanukali guests'.' A lalkc lunch?
By all means. (What could be bad?)
And here are some slightly otT-tne-
eaten-track suggestions loo;
*A "Second" Breakfast
*A Borshl & Bagel Braflchemi
*Tbe Skip-a-Coursc Luneheoa
?Do-it-yourself
Sandwich Smorgasbord
*A Nine-is-Fine P.M. Party
TalYing of festivities, I do want YOU
to have your share of "Fcstii e Manna.**
Far a FREF. copy of this rather exciting
aad quite unusual cookbook (40 pages,
57 recipes, lots of illustrations) send a
Planters Oil label or cap liner to Festiva
Manna. Planters Oil, P.O. Box 063.
Madison Square Station, N.Y. 10010.
t-Tnd, talking or Chanukah treaty
here are two, both festive and fancy.
CHOCOLATE SUGAR PLUMS
3 quares(l-oz. each! semi-sweet chocolate
V cup milk '. < cup Planters Oil
2 egg yolks, beaten
% cup chopped toasted Planters Pecans
',2 teaspoon vanilla extract
4 cups sifted confectioners' sugar
Caannine chocolate and milk in lop oT a
sable boiler. Cook oter boiling mer un-
til chocolate is melted; stir iuiaium unul
and thick. Remote from heal. AM
lers Oil and beaten egg >olks; stir
tigorously until mixture is thorough!* j
blended. Let cool 10 minutes. Stir ia
Planters Pecans and > an ilia extract. Graft- ,
uallT add confectioners' sugar, blending
tell after each addition. Chill at least I
hour. Roll into balls I inch in diameter. hT
desired, roll in grated semi-sweet chsc-
ulale or Imeh chopped toasted I'teaem
Pecan*. Chill until ready to senc Voa'al
as* about 4 doaea < 1 .'* panada) <
.S-carPtaoa.
ALMONOAPPU!
.. nip unsifted I
1 teaspoon baking powder Mi hi
'.'4 cup Planters Oil 34cup
1 egg >/4 teaspoon almond attract
V* cup chopped toasted Planters
8lanched Almonds
Vi cup chopped apple
Conlectionm sugar
SHI llgtlair flour, baking
salt; set aside. In medium howl.
Plasters Oil and sugar; stir to I
ia egg "ell; add almond extract. StarbThbV
ingredientv until moistened; stir in Plaama
Almonds and chopped apple. Spread nur-
ture in oiled 8 x 8-inch square pan; bake at
3SO*F. for 35 minutes. While narm, cat
into 2-inch squares. Sprinkle with confne-
liuaers' sugar before sen ing. You'll hat*
sixteen muachy cookie squares.
Of
waaader the Groat:
Every year, on a j ust-before Chanukah
Sunday, George Parkas, philanthropic
bead of AlcvanoW'sDeoartiricniStores,
opens his Bronx store to residents, of
local homes for lhe aged and infirm
With the friendly help of volunteer env
ployees, these \ery special customer*
re\el in the joys of holiday shopping
and proceeds are donated to charily.
Isn't that a happy Chanukah tradition?
It is a picturesque tradition in Israel far
m torch to be lit at Modin. home nl tkr
Maccabees, and lor young rela) runners
to bear the flaming torch from town 10
town. Let M hope that the bravely bunt-
ing Chanukali candles will carry ilm
message of freedom throughout tlm
world. The makers of Flcischmann's
Margai ines and Planters Oil wish yarn m
blight happy Chanukah.
MANNA ABOUT TOWN
IS A STANDARD BRANDS EXClUSIrt
EXCLUSIVELY FOR THI
MtMNT YOUNS" H0MFMJ(fR

Page 4-B
Jewish ncridinn
Friday. December 3, 1966
Woman With 'Buttoned Down' Mind Will
Attend Leadership Training Institute
Or. Scheinberg
Zev Bufmon
Bill Bans
Miami Chapter of Hadassah Presents
Myrtle Wreath Awards to Noted Localites
The second annual Myrtle
Wreath Awards, sponsored by the
Miami Chapter of Hadassah, will
be presented Monday evening, at
Temple Israel.
Myrtle Wreath Awards, the high-
est citation Hadassah can betow,
will be presented to William C.
Baggs, editor of The Miami News,
in the field of journalism; to Zev
Bufman, of the Coconut Grove The-
atre, for his contribution to cul-
tural arts in Miami; and to Dr.
Peritz Scheinberg, for his contri-j
bution in the field of medicine and j
research.
The presentation will be made.
by Mrs. Irwin Liss, past president j
of the Florida Region of Hadassah.
A special citation will be made
to Dr. Mordechai Shalit. member
of the staff of the Hadassah-Heb-
rew University Medical Center in
Jerusalem, who has been studying
here under a grant from the Na-
tional Institute of Health during
the past year. The citation will be
presented by Mrs. Samuel Stein-,
berg, president of the Miami Chap
ter of Hadassah.
Hadassah members who have
achieved outstanding goals in,
membership will also be honored,
at the annual Myrtle Wreath
Awards, as will all life members
and third and fourth generation
life members. Life associates (men
who have become associated with
Hadassah for life) will also be
honored. Miami Chapter vice pres-
ident for membership. Mrs. Ralph
Hankin, and chapter life member-
ship chairman. Mr* Joseph Mil-
ton, head these departments.
A special feature of the awards
night will .be a musical program
featuring Mrs. Bernard Fleissig,
soloist, accompanied by Mrs. Mar-
tin Braterman. Refreshments will
be served.
Chairman of the second annual
Myrtle Wreath Awards Night is
Mrs. Gerald P. Soltz, past president
of the Florida Region of Hadassah.
Other members of the committee
are Mrs. Bernard Kramarsky. Mrs.
Louis Schwartzman, Mrs. Henry
Paul. Mrs. Joseph Milton, Mrs.
Ralph Hankin. Mrs. Max Jacobson,
Mrs. Rose Rushkin and rflrs. Leon
Rosoff.
On Tuesday, at 9:30 a.m., the
woman with the buttoned-down
mind will arrive at Beth David
Congregation to take par' in a
Leadership Training Institute-
sponsored by the Federation of
Jewish Women.
She wiU spend the next few
hours listening to other women
with buttoned-down minds pin-
point the problems and solutions
which a woman encounters as a
leader of a woman's organization.
Who is the woman with the but-
toned-down mind? She is the wom-
an who belongs to one of the many
Jewish women's organizations in
Dade County, and she is the wom-
an who has bound herself to the
promise of a better local commun-
ity and a better world Jewish com-
munity through her participation
in that organization.
Daniel Neal Heller, a Miami at-;
torney and noted participant in
numerous philanthropic and civic
activities, will be guest speaker
for the event.
Joining Heller on the Institute's
program are Mrs. Robert Shapiro,
president of the Young Women's j
Division of the Combined Jewish t
Appeal, who will speak on "Agen-j
da Planning"; Mrs. Aaron Farr,
national campaign chairman and j
national board member of
the National Council of Jewish
Women, and member of the advis-1
Jory committee of the Federation |
of Jewish Women, who will dis-
cuss "Parliamentary Procedure"; |
and Mrs. Sidney M. Schwartz, also
on Federation's advisory commit-
tee, and national chairman of the
National Women's Committee of
Brandeis University, who will
speak on "Orientation of a Nom-
inating Committee.'
Institute guests will also take
part in a Problem Clinic. Mem-
bers of the Problem Clinic panel
include Mrs. Edwin B. Oppen-
heim, president of the National
Council of Jewish Women; Mrs.
Harry Rosenblatt, national vice
president of Women's American
ORT; and Mrs. Dorothy Kri<>err
Fink, parliamentarian of the Fed-
eration of Jewish Women.
Chairman of the day is Mrs. Irv-
ing Wexler. Mrs. Jack Katzman
served as chairman of arrange-
ments.
- COMPANION WANTED-
FOB ELDERLY WOMAN, beouti^il prj,.
ate room, bath, in 2-bedro, apt
light duties. S1C0 monthly.
CALL 754-6102
---------:i--------:------------
tkit tSTlHAItS I AST S*VICE
ALL WINDOW
REPAIR
5840 S.W. 68th Stret
666-M39

In convenient toil-wrapped slices and
wedges. The way you want it, for sand-
wiches, snacks or when company comes.
Imported from Thoune, Switzerland,
by Gerber Cheese Co., Inc., New York
AVE to be
Jewish to love
MAR-PARV
Margarine
K
.^-..-.
Certified kosher and pareve. Can be used with meat or dairy
meals. No milk or animal fat in it. Made from highly-unsaturatea
corn oil and other vegetable oils. Delicious, golden, all purpos
Margarine. Spreads smoothly even ice-cold. Guess you don
have to be Jewish to enjoy MarParv after all! Savvy, Chief?
KOSHER and
PAREVE
The Miami Margarine Co.
Cincinnati, Ohio

. uounmier ;i ISKK
Friday, December 9, 1966
* lewisti ftcridHan
Page 5-B
Miami Beach Chapter of Hadassah Units
Mark Henrietta Szold Day at Luncheons
Continued from Pag* 1-B. .
Monde- noop. at Washington Fed-
eral. !*jnwiwiy 1ste>. Snack lunch-
eon and sweets will be served.
Mrs. Larnett Joseph will review
the bo:k, "Tell Me Another Morn-
ing," by Ziena Berger. Mrs. Jack
Wolfsttin is president.
* e
Honietta Scold Group will hold
its rt^ular lur.cheon meeting on
Monday. 12:30 p.m., at the Algiers
Hotel Mrs. Barr.ett Beckerman, ed-
ucatior vice president of chapter,
will present a Chanuka skit. Mrs.
Sol Greenberg is president.
*
Morion Towors Group will hold
its annual Henrietta Szold Found-!
ers Dey luncheon on Monday noon!
at the Algiers Hotel. Guest speak-
er wiJl be Rabbi Jonah Caplan. j
Also on the program will be Mrs.!
Hattie Wagner in a calvalcade of'
traditicnal Char.uka songs. Mrs.
Samuel Opper.heim is chairman
of the day. Mrs. Emanuel Mentz is
president.
Southgate Group will hold its
annual Henrietta Szold Founders
Jay luncheon oq. Monday, 12:30
p.m., in the Giyi Room of the Fon j
taineblcau Hotel. Musical portion j
of the afternoon will be offered |
hv Cantor Saul Breeh. of Temple !
Beth Raphael. Mrs. Tillie Schwartz
is chairman of the day. Mrs. Jos-
eph Rosenberg is president.
V K
Soph's Tucker Group will hold
its regular meeting on Monday,
1 p.m., at the Coastal Towers. The
book, "A Woman of Valor." will
be reviewed. Mrs. Edward Roth-
stein is president.
on
Mrs. Emil Morton will sing a
cycle of international and Amer-
ican songs at the Eddie Cantor
Group Henrietta Szold Founders
Day luncheon on Thursday noon,
De?. 15. in the Gigi Room of the
Fontainebleau Hotel. Mrs. Harry-
Glass is president.
*
Rerun jh twpter will have a
Mrs. Mindlin to be Speaker
Mrs. Leo (Hilary) Mindlin will
speak on "The Influence of Jew-
ish Writers in Literature" at the
monthly luncheon meeting of Tem-
ple Beth Am Sisterhood on
Wednesday, Dec. 21, at 11:30 a.m..
in the Youth Lounge.
Beth Israel Stages
Chanuka Plays
A Chanuka program will be
presented at Beth Israel Congre-
gation on Sunday at 11 a.m. by
members of the Shabbat youth
groups.
Program will include a talent
show and Chanuka plays, with
Rabbi Sholem I.ifchetz. youth di-
rector, and Marvin Schreiber,
chairman of the youth and educa-
tion committee, in charge of the
morning.
-\? Jjl !JX J$! Jfc J$M$* ijl 2$S
day at the races at Tropical Park
on Tuesday. Mrs. Robert Cohen
will serve as chairman of the
event. Mrs. Walter Lebowitz is
chapter president.
rtdcwt I lioJuk
TMI ftO* *IIH IHC HOMO* HAH

spread Florida sunshine this
Hanukkah with navel oranges
10.95 full bushel, delivered
6.9Ji half bushel, delivered
A gift packed with all the sunny flavor of
Florida! Sweet, seedless premium navel oranges
. tree ripened and so full of juicy goodness!
A welcome way to spread Florida sunshine
to friends and relatives in the North.
JM CITRUS, first floor, miami
available at dadeland and fort lauderdale
Sorry, no C.O.D.'s
1501 8ISCAYNE BOULEVARD PARK FREE!
HAPPY
HANUKKAH
JM extends sincere
greetings and best wishes
tor a bright and
happy Hanukkah season.
NOW AT DADELAND
M TH| STORt WiTM THE 'LOtlOA PLMfl
aive bartonettes
for hanukkah
2.29
One pound of goodness, Barton's
parve miniature milk and dark
chocolates are beautifully
gift-wrapped with a Menorah
design on the box. Everyone's
favorite selection!
JM CANDY, first floor, miami
available at dadeland
and fort lauderdale
Sorry, no COD's

r nacry. uecembr 3fl 1QKIT
Friday, December 9, 1966
v-Jew/st flcrKfiam
Page 7-3
'Girl Talk' Virginia Graham to Spice
Fontainebleau Cancer League Luncheon
Worley is New President Sdlllte to Authors
Jack H. Worley, a leader in the Q Jewish Books
crusade to hold hurricane and
Women's Cancer League of Mi-
ami Beach will hold its eighth an-
nual get-together at a luncheon
next Wednesday "ht the Fontaine-
bjeau Hotel.
NBC's "Girl Talk" Virginia Gra-
ham will provide special flavor
to the gala luncheon, which last
year attracted over 1,000 women.
Proceeds go to Mount Sinai
Hospital's Tumor Clinic.
A Sara Fredericks fashion show
with top-flight designer creations,
favors and prizes will complete
the afternoon planned by Mrs.
Frances l.inn, honorary chairman,
and Mrs. Abe Schonfcld, luncheon
chairman.
President is Mrs. Morris Gidney,
and Mrs. Robert Grossman and
Mrs. Martin Wexler, ticket co-
chairmen, are in charge of reser-
vations.
Bolstering the attendance and
the proceeds arc a group of com-
munity leaders who have agreed
to be sponsors for the affair.
Under the chairmanship of Mrs.
Edward L Cowcn, over 40 people.
io far, have agreed to participate
windstorm insurance facilities in
South Florida, has been elected
president of the Insurance Infor-
mation Council, a non-profit, non-
political organization comprised of j
leaders in all segments of South
Florida's property and casualty
insurance industry. The Council
compiles and disseminates factual
information on area insurance.
on a special subscription basis
which, according to Mrs. Cowen
"will probably permit us to under-
write the entire cost of the lunch-
con."
Observing Jewish Book Month,
the Synagogues of North Dade, in
conjunction with the Bureau of
Jewish Education, will meet at
Congregation B'nai Raphael on,
Wednesday, at 8:30 p.m.
Program will include Mclvyn,
Frumkes, who will review "Thi-
Fixer," by Bernard Malnmud.
Maurice Samuel's book, "The Be-
leis Trial," will be the theme *>(
Rabbi Harold Richter's talk.
The Jewish Nobel prize winners
will be saluted by the executive
director of the Bureau of Jewish
Education, Louis Schwartzman.
VIRGINIA GRAHAM
Woman Realtor
To Head Board
Alma R. Tonenbaum. realtor,
will be installed as president of
the Miami Beach Board of Real-
tors on Sunday a! u banquet at the
Deauville Hotel.
First woman president in the
history of the board, she has be-'
come associated with the Jack Jus-
tice realty organization at 11431
Kane Concourse, Bay Harbor Is-.
lands.
CHAN UK A GREETINGS
TO ALL
TCUN
MANUFACTURING
CORP.
3729 NW 80th STREET
OX 1-1213
Lerner and Eisenberg
Families
*
CHEESC
Ravioli
IN SUC<
eat
If you like cheese kreplach,
you'll love this Cheese Ravi-
oli-tender little rwacaroni
pies, filled with tangy Italian
cheese, simmered with sa-
vory tomato sauce, seasoned
the real Italian way. Thrifty,
too-costs only about 17* per
serving.
HAVI SOMf SOOMI
OUR TWENTIETH ANNIVERSARY!
^Ar
~See no more, my &ufy*.
if* "*
IMMENDELSOM
OPEN DAILY 8-6
OPEN SUNDAYS
621 WASHINGTON AVENUE
MIAMI BEACH Phone 532-2426
AND SONS, INC.
S SOUTH I
*]r2ftMEATS*POULTRY*DELICATESSEN|n
\w**r STRICTLY KOSHER Under Strict Rabbinical Supervision RABBI JOSEPH E. RACKOVSKY I W JJV
Our Newly Renovated Beautifully
Decorated Beach Store Now Fully
Air-Conditioned For Your Comfort
*
*e
tt*
,oW
DOB
,uQ*(
\
05
?***

Page 8-B
vJmist ncrxfiar?
Friday. December 3. 1966
ranees
JLA
man
We
the
Women
WOMAN OF THE WEEK
MflDfffD
Mildred Finegold, now Mrs. Morris Gidney, was born
in Indianapolis, but moved to Cincinnati when she was
seven. She was the little angel of the family, while her
younger sister, Carolyn, got into all the mischief. Her
mother always insisted that her sister tag along wherever
she went. As a result, later with
her own family, Mildred never de-
manded that the children be re-
sponsible for each other. Mildred
had registered to attend Michael
Reese to study to be a lab tech-
nician, but men seem to spoil wom-
en's best intentions. Little sister,
playing with her best friend, met
her best friend*s brother. Looking
at Carolyn's cute face, Morris Gid-
ney said, "Are there any more at
home like you, only older?"
So Mildred forgot the X-Rays
and lab techniques, and within six
weeks they were engaged. In three
months, they were married. Dur-
ing the first five years of their
married life, they lived in Cincinnati, then moved to Miami
Beach in 1946. There are three Gidney offspring, Marilyn,
now Mrs. Howard Fredin; Marsha, in college; and Marc, in
high school. Since Mildred had taken a course in child
psychology, she raised Marilyn by "The Book." However,
when Marilyn was five, she threw "The Book" away, and
child-raising became much less work and more fun. es-
pecially for the next two.
Mildred has always been a crusader, wanting to help
others. In high school she helped form a junior chapter
of the True Sisters and then became the first junior to
be a senior member. As a teen-ager she worked in the
EENT clinic of the hospital, which proved as valuable
later to her as having an old-fashioned medical book.
Since arriving in Miami Beach. Mildred has gone the
way of PTA at Temple Beth Sholom. the public school
I'TA's. including being on one of the first committees for
the new Miami Beach High School building, charter mem-
ber of Deborah Group of Hadassah program for Youth
Aliyah, and charter member and president of the Beth
Rose Cancer Unit. These are just a few of the stepping
stones by which she arrived at the presidency she now
holds of the Women's Cancer League of Miami Beach,
whic holds its annual fund-raising luncheon Dec. 14 at
the Fontainebleau.
The Gidneys live in a beautiful home on the water,
which is filled with feelings of warmth, friendship and
happiness. They have close family ties which are never
more in evidence than on Sundays, when they all gather
at the Gidneys, featuring food galore, plenty of big towels
for the pool, and great fishing. Morry baits the hooks for
the squeamish, takes off the fish for the faint-hearted and
even cleans their catch so that guests can take it home.
Of course. Pop and Mom Gidney sit in state and
everything contentedly. Mildred, incidentally, can fish for
hours she still talks about the dolphin she caughl isl
summer on the Keys.
The Gidneys like to take quick jaunts to New York to
see the new shows. They also go island-hopping. Mildred
particularly enjoys antique-hunting. It took two trips to
New Orleans and a trip to New York to find the item
that would be just right for the wall at the front entrance.
Now she has started a stein collection that she finds most
fascinating. In addition to these interests, she enjoys dec
Orating, sewing, cooking, and golf. Her golf trophies are
numerous and look imposing in the den. (She was chairman
of the Women's Coll Association of Bayshore.l
But first and foremost. Mildred is family-conscious and
before all else tome her family and home. Her own mother,
m they call Mama Betty, would be the first to attest
hat.
Sunday Ceremony
For Widenhouses
Florence Peppi, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Ben Hausman, 7540 Mu-
tiny Ave., exchanged marital vows
with Donald F. Widenhouse in an
early afternoon ceremony con-
ducted by Dr. Joseph Narot at
Temple Israel on Sunday. Nov. 27.
The bridegroom is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. M. G. Widenhouse, of
Midland, N.C.
For the nuptials, ihe bride se-
lected a gown styled with a slim
skirt of peau crepe and a bodice
with long pointed sleeves of chan-
tilly lace and scalloped neckline.
The camelot train had a border
and inserts of chantilly lace
sprinkled with pearls and irrides-
cent paillettes. The full illusion
shoulder veil was held by a prin-
cess crown of chantilly lace trim-
med with pearls and pearl tear
drops.
Bridal attendants were Joyce
Rosenberg and Gail Widenhouse,
the groom's sister. Bill Fanning
served as best man and Don Mor-
gan as usher.
New Mrs. Widenhouse gradu-
ated from Miami Beach High,
where she was Coronation Queen
and Miami Beach Optimist Queen.
She attended the University of Mi-
ami and is now a legal secretary
Her bridegroom attended Brev
ard Junior College, Brevard. N.C,
and the University of North Car-
olina. Chapel Hill.
The newlyweds will live in
North Miami.
BAR MiTZVAH and BAS MITZVAH INVITATIONS
NAPKINS MATCHES MENUS STIRRERS PLACE CARDS
THE WKHSPMNi; SHOMTE
"tverything but the Gown and Groom"
Phone 444-0614 3614 CORAL WAY, MIAMI Closed Thursdays
F. Allen BeokM
MRS. DONALD WIDENHOUSE
Temple Rites For
Edward Ludwigs
A chantilly lace gown and or-
chids on a white Bible were the
choice of Lois Enid Bookbinder
when she exchanged marital vows
with Edward Charles Ludwig on
Sunday, Dec. 4.
Dr. Irving Lehrman. officiated at
the afternoon ceremony which was
held at Temple Emanu-El. Follow-
ing a reception in Sirkin Hall, the
couple left for a honeymoon in
Jamaica.
Parents of the newlyweds are
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph George Book-
binder. 1239 Marseille Dr., Mrs.
Isabelle Ludwig. 7501 E. Treasure
Dr., and the late Mr. Herman Lud-
wig.
Attending the bride were her
sister, Phyllis Bookbinder, and
Iris Bookbinder. Barry Goldman
served as best man, and Eddie
Bookbinder ushered.
A graduate of Miami Beach Sen-
ior High, new Mrs. Ludwig attend-
ed Miami-Dade Junior College.
Her bridegroom is a graduate of
Long Branch High, attended the
University of North Carolina and
earned a degree at the University
of Miami.
Annette Grant
And Claude Cash
To Wed in Jan.
Mr. and Mrs. Morris Grar.t. 2376
SW 26th Ter.. have announced the
engagement of their daughter, An-
nette, to Claude H. Cash, of Jack-
sonville, N. C.
A graduate of Miami Senior
High, where she was a rrember
of the Spanish Honor Soe:-.> and
of DEBS, the bride-elec has a
1965 BA degree from the Univer-
sity of North Carolina, where she
was awarded an assistants!-.;;). Now
an instructor in Spanish at the
university, she will receive ..n MA
in January, 1967.
Son of A. G. Cash and the late
Mrs. Gladys Cash, of Fayetteville,
N. C, the future bridegroom has
a Bachelor of Business Adminis-
tration degree from the U: : ersity
of North Carolina, served ir four
years in the L'. S Marine and is
currently employed as a c tnager
in a national transportat:. j com-
pany.
A January wedding i> anned
for the betrothed couple.
4 X*
W. rn. i Kalm
MRS. EDWARD LUDWIG
Sisterhood Cites
Prexy Mrs. Stein
Mo!lie Kahaner Sisterr od of
Beth Torah Congregation ill hon-
or Mrs. Stanley Stein. \ /> has
served as its president f three
vears. with a 'Woman o: Valor"
luncheon.
Mrs. Stein is waj s ;n neaiu
vice president of the con. .ation,
an unprecedented honoi for a
Sisterhood member, and treas-
urer of the Florida Cram >f Na-
tional Women's l.(.
She has been educati ictiv
ities chairman of Natioi Wom-
en s League for the last I ears.
Luncheon will be held in the
social hall on Tuesday n Ian.
24. Mrs. Irving I
keynote speaker
Mrs. Arthur I. Snyder --hair-
man of the luncheon.
Miss Braterman
Is Bride-to-Be
The betrothal of Ellen Frances
Braterman to Louis E. Pease has
been announced by the bride-
elect's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Mar
tha Braterman. 17625 NE 8th PI..
N. Miami Beach.
The future bridegroom is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Everett G.
| Pease, 944 Ibis Ave Miami
I Springs.
There is only 1
BILLY BELLACK
ENTERTAINING
ORCHESTRA
SPECIALIZING
IN
WEDDINGS &
BAR MIUVAHS
In Perscr Alwayi
Wl 7-8124
yWWWW^WXMM
ATTENTION HEARING AID USERS
AND THOSE WITH HEARING PROBLEMS.
3( at
a cw( otkei iwcce 3 cm wUa i/oa, wjclUuuj
do not keiU&tt to call me at
m&
Quality <
Cleaning Laundry
1201-20th Street 5
Miami Beach
JE 8-6104
OrtH 7 AM. 7 fM. Some Day Service Nmrtr An Extra Chora*
N^W^N^^VS^^WVWSyv^V
^t*^**^^*^*^^***^**^^^^^*
DID YOU EVER THINK OF GIVING A HEARING AID?
The most precious GIFT of oil is BETTER HEARING
Truly a Gtf* of Love. Let your loved one hear the
wonderful Sound of Christmas the same as you do.
EXPER1 MAKING AID REPAIRS
757-6141
WE WILL LEND
FREE
PICK UP
& DELIVER
YOU AN AID WHILE WE REPAIR YOURS
SUPREME HEARING CENTER
"Om Guateit Concern a (/m fiemnq and Om Ityirtation"
7937 N.E.2 AYE MIAMI 757-6141
WE INVITE YOU TO V CUSTOM EAR MOLD CORDS
COMPARE PRICES \ BATTERIES ACCESSORIES

rndcry. December Ufl 1WR
Friday. December 9. 1966
-Jtmtsii ncridttan
Page 9-B
EWISH National Fund banquet
was held Sunday evening at
the Fontaincbleau Hotel. For the
evening, Mrs. Al Flederman
chose a white silk sheath with
a sequin trimmed lace bodice.
Mrs. David Adelson was in a
silver lame sheath with the long
torso line. Her skirt flared out
in the trumpet flounce. Mrs.
Frances Warner's white wool
knit featured silver sequins and
clear crystals scattered over the
sheath.
A floral print in greens, going
from the emerald green to the
olive shade, was worn by Mrs.
Rose Glickman. Mrs. Harry Shul-
riiner topped her black silk crepe
with a beige-colored ribbon lace,
mink-collared jacket.
LJRS. Wally Gluck wore a black
" chiffon skirt with a metallic
muiti colored fringed bodice.
Mrs. Ben Silver saw an unusual
iabric from which she made the
gown she wore, featuring a tur-
quoise silk chiffon with gold cut
velvet in a floral pattern. Mrs.
Morris Putter's black silk dinner
ensemble featured a softly-tail-
ored matching jacket. Mrs. Ida
Wessel also made her gown, a
two-piece silk matellasse with
ihe high jewel neckline and go-
rict insert low in the back hem-
iine of her skirt.
Ice pink silk crepe was worn
by Mrs. Miriam Press. Her floor-
iength gown featured silver-lined
bugle beads embroidered on the
Jitted bodice. Mrs. Ethel Curson
chose a peacock blue raw silk.
Her long-sleeved matching jacket
had a cutaway front. Mrs. Sadie
Kaplan's black satin had bur-
pandy-colored floral brocaded in-
serts. They were detailed with
French metallic ribbon lace.
Mrs. Louis Dublin topped her
black silk crepe floor-length
skirt with a silver and white se-
ijiiined shell. Blush pink alencon
lace was Mrs. Sam Gechman's
choice for the banquet. Her
sheath had a modified bateau
neckline. Gold and black pail-
lettes covered the shell worn by
Mrs. Emma Rattner. Her floor-
length skirt was in gold lame.
3
ILJRS. Rose Hochstim's ensem-
ble was bought while on a
recent trip to Hong Kong. Her
turquoise skirt was in satin, and
her hand-beaded shell featured
sequins, caviar beads, and crys-
tals. Matching crystal beaded
shoes completed her ensemble.
Mrs. Joseph Jaffe's color choice
was a deep misty blue. Her skirt
was in silk crepe, and her fitted
bodice was chantilly lace.
-Mrs. Hyman Dubowry's shell
pink silk crepe gown had a cloon-
ey lace bodice. A matching, long-
sleeved jacket completed the en-
semble. White silk was Mrs. Hel-
en Pollocks choice. Her jacket
had a small stand-up neckline
which was embroidered with
pearls and rhinestones. Mrs.
Philip Sahl wore pink crepe with
iridescent sequins embroidered
on her bolero-styled lace jacket.
Debussy Will
Theme Concert
The life and music of Claude De-
busy will feature a concert at the
.Musicians Club of America, 303
Minorca Ave., Coral Gables, on
Sunday at 4 p.m.
The theme will be drawn from
the book. "Claude Debussy," by
Pierre MaMure.
Mrs. George Sogg will sing
"Nuit d'Etoiles," "Beau Soir" and
"Reverie." accompanied by Morse
Haithwaite. who will also play
solos, including "Claire de Lune"
and "Golliwog's Cakewalk.''
Mrs. Sogg. former executive di-
rector of the Musicians Club, and
Haithwaite, present office manage
of the Club's home here, are pre-
senting the program for the Club.

B. Allen Becker
MISS JAYNl MARDER
Jayne Marder
Will be June Bride
Of Mr. Steinman
A June wedding is planned for
i Jayne M. Marder, whose engage-
ment to Arthur J. Steinman has
: been announced by the future
bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
i David Marder. 4245 N. Bay Rd.
Son of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel
Steinman, N. Brunswick, N. J.; the
prospective bridegroom is a gradu-
ate of Rider College in New Jer-
sey, where he was elected to the
Honorary Accounting Society.
He is now attending New York \
University Graduate School and |
Business Administration and will |
receive an MBA degree in invest-1
1 ments in June.
His fiancee is a graduate of
' Miami Beach High and is now
j majoring in elementary education
at Miami Pade Junior College.
Mrs. Bialolenki
Receives Award
From Demo Club
The Adlai Stevenson Democratic
Women's Club awarded Mrs.
Andre S. Bialolenki its Outstanding
Democratic Woman's Award.
The award was presented by
Mrs. Louis Glasser, president of the
club, to Mrs. Bialolenki "for her
outstanding leadership and her
contribution to the efforts of the
Democratic Women."
Attending the special meeting
for the presentation was Mrs. Wil-
liam R. Kidd. chairman of the Gov-
ernor's Commission on the Status
of Women, who spoke on the-need
for education of women in govern-
ment, industry and the home.
She also discussed legislation
for equality of employment based
on qualification, competence and
need, not on sex. Adequate child
care programs sponsored by state
and industry, and the protection
of the property rights of married
women, were also discussed by
Mrs. Kidd.
New officers of the Adlai Ste-
venson Democratic Women's Club
to be installed in January are Mrs.
Mai Englander. president: Mrs.
Andre S. Bialolenki, first vice
president; Mrs. Max Levine, sec-
ond vice president; Mrs. Marvin
Kimmel, third vice president; Mrs.
Saul Spielburg financial secretary; |
Mrs. Lillian Engle and Mrs. Mur-
ray Smith, treasurers: Mrs. Ben
Hammerman, recording secretary;
Mrs. Ben Packer, corresponding
secretary; Mrs. Rena Stein, parli-
amentarian; Mrs. Irving Cooper I
man. chaplain; Mrs. Austin Burke
and Mrs. Joseph Shawmut. his-'
torians; Mrs. Louis Glasser. hon-j
orary president.
E. Allen Becker
MISS JERRI GUTSTEIN
Terri Gutstein Is
Prospective Bride
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Gutstein an-
nounce the engagement of their
daughter. Terri Irene, to Stephen.
Mechanic.
The future bridegroom is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. William Me-
chanic, of Miami Beach.
Contentment and Happiness
"Contentment and Happiness"
will be the topic of the lecture by
Dr. Abraham Wolfson before the
Spinoza Forum for Adult Educa-
tion on Thursday, 10 a.m., in the
auditorium of the Washington
Federal. 1234 Washington Ave.
LEO HOHAUSER
PLUMBING
CONTRACTING RfPAIRING
Serving Dnde County Over 25 Yean
1811 S.W. 14th ST. HI 6-9904
MAKE YOUR WEDDING, BAR MIUVA, ANY FUNCTION
"THE TALK OF THE TOWN" with
IRVING PIETRACK ORCHESTRA

Page 10-B
*Jewish ncrkUnr*
Friday, Decerrier 9 1966
Final Lecture In
Temple Israel
Parents Series
The final lecture in the Parents
Series, "The Deprived Child of the
Affluent Society." and a noted
rabbi-author will feature the week-
end adult education program at
Temple Israel of Greater Miami.
Dr. Carolyn Garwood, assistant
professor of education at the Uni-
versity of Miami, will wind up the
ten-week Parents Series at 10 a.m.,
Saturday morning, with a talk on
"Home-School Relationships."
Dr. Garwood, who received her
doctorate at the University of
Missouri in counseling psychology,
also taught counseling there and
at Syracuse University before com-
ing to the University of Miami.
She has been consultant to num-
erous workshops and training in-
stitutes designed to help teachers
in guidance and counseling.
Rabbi Albert I. Gordon, of New- j
ton Centre. Mass.. is the author of
three noted sociological studies. ;
Sunday, at 10 a.m., at the Green-
field Adult Institute, Dr. Gordon
will lecture on "Intermarriage and
the Future of American Jews."
Rabbi Gordon served a Minne-
apolis Conservative pulpil tor 16
years, then as executive director
of the United Synagogue Ol Amer-
ica. He Is a member (if the faculty
of Andover Newton Theological |
Seminary and also lectures in
anthoropolgy at Boston University,
in addition to service on many:
civic and Jewish boards.
Book Month Rally
At B'nai Raphael
Celebration of Jewish Book
Month will culminate with a third
Jewish Book Month Rally to be
held on Wednesday evening, 8i
p.m., at Congregation B'nai Ra-1
phael. 1401 N\V 183rd St.
Sponsored by the Bureau of j
Jewish Education in cooperation \
with the synagogues of the North I
Dade area, subject will be "The!
Nobel Prize Winners and the Men-1
del Beilis Case."
Louis Schwartzman, executive
director of the Bureau of Jew-
ish Education, will present a
salute to S. Y. Agnon and Nelly
Sachs, Nobel Priie winners.
Melvyn B. Frumkes, local attor-
ney, treasurer of the Bureau,
will review "The Fixer," by
Bernard Malamud.
Rabbi Arnold Richter. of Con-
gregation B nai Raphael, will pre-
sent the background of the Men-
del Beilis Case involved in Mala-
mud's novel. "The Fixer."
A book review contest for teen-
agers is now taking place in the
Jewish schools of Greater Miami.
The winners of the contest will
receive prizes and participate in
the television broadcast, "The
Still, Small Voice." program of the
Greater Miami Rabbinical Asso-
ciation.
SHOPPING AROUND
WITH
f&rtbJflcth
Fleiichmann's Margarine
When cooking for Chanuka, what
better way is there to gain the ad-
miration of your family than by
treating them to a special dairy
dish?
And when selecting the ingredi-
ents for this dish, Jewish house-
wives look to Fleischmann's Mar-
garine to assure that favorite
recipe treats are extra good.
Fleischmann's brings out the
flavor of any dairy' meal. Delicate-
ly delicious Fleischmann's Mar-
garine delivers country-fresh gold-1
en goodness to your table. It's the i
margarine that comes from sun-1
ripened corn fields and made from
100 per cent pure corn oil.
The versatility of Fleischmann's
Margarine makes it adaptable to
any dairy eating occasion, and re-
member, it's certified Kosher. Be;
sure to buy Fleischmann's Margar-
ine and use it for your favorite
daify recipes.
Neufchatel Cheese
Lovers of cream cheese who
are concerned with counting cal-
ories will be pleased to learn
about another of Borden's quality
products. It's Neufchatel (pro-
nounced New sha tel) Cheese
which has all of the characteristics
of cream cheese but is 30 per cent
lower in fat and higher in pro-
tein.
Neufchatel cheese was first
made in France and has been
known to cheese-lovers for a long
time. It is a good-tasting soft
cheese which looks, tastes and
spreads like cream cheese. It can
be used in practically every recipe -,
which calls for cream cheese.
Neufchatel thinned with a little
skim milk and flavored with onion j
makes a fine dip. For a quick, j
easy, hot vegetable for luncheon
or dinner add softened Neufchatel
cheese to a can of pickled beets
and heat over low or medium heat, i
Look for the package with the
blue corner on the label which
identifies Borden's Eagle Brand
Neufchatel Cheese. If you like
cream cheese, you'll love Neuf-
chatel.
*
It's Latkes Season
There's a new angle to the tra-
ditional celebration of the ancient
Festival of Lights. Even if you
were to eat potato latkes eight
times, one for every Chanuka can-
dle, you could have them with not
just eight, but your choice of ten
| different Mott's Applesauces. Of
course, every one of the ten is
parve, so you can serve them with
potato latkes browned in butter or
in chicken fat, with any meal.
First, and most important to a
traditionalist, there's the all-time
favorite, Mott's Applesauce, with
the famous five-apple flavor. Next,
new in recent years, but already
a staple in many Jewish homes,
are the five Fruit Treats "heim-
ische" applesauce full of bite-sized
chunks of apple, plus a second
fruit for extra flavor: pineapple,
strawberry, cherry, raspberry, or
apricot.
And now there's the newest of
all, Mott's Fruit Sauces, designed
to please children and the young
at heart. These are specially
smooth applesauces in four de-
lightful varieties: one fragrant
with old fashioned spices, three
flavored with fresh fruit: cherry,
raspberry, and strawberry. What a
treat for people who wouldn't
think of eating potato latkes with
out Mott's.
If you have an electric blender,
you will want to give up the old
hand-grater that tends to grate,
hands along with potatoes, and let
the blender do the work. However
you make the latkes. Mott's Apple-
sauce or Treats are made just
righl I" serve with them.
Potato Latkes
4 medium potatoes, peeled
1/2 onion
2 eggs
1 teaspoon salt
2 tablespoons flour
Butter, oil, or chicken fat
for frying
Peel the potatoes, cut them into
small pieces, and drop into cold
water. Put half the potatoes into
the blender, add cold water to
cover them, and blend about 4 sec-
onds, just until grated. Drain in a
sieve. Repeat with remaining po-
tatoes. Cut the onion and put it
into the blender with the eggs,
salt and flour. Blend a few sec-
onds until onions are grated. Add \
to potatoes, stir well. Drop by j
tablespoonfuls into hot melted but- <
ter or hot oil or fat. Brown on |
both sides until crisp. Serve hot. |
Our Chanuka gift to you is a
secret that will give you a choice'
of not 10 ways to serve Mott's j
apple with your potato latkes, but |
20. Try heating the sauce, as an
alternate to serving it ice cold. |
This is especially good with
"fleishidig" latkes.
HAPPY HOLIDAY
VISIT THE .
< hi:i:m:
SHOP
76 MIRACLE MILE
Famous for cheeses from
all over the world.
Try Our World Famous
CHEESE CAKE
NONE BETTER)
F
Holiday Greetings fro:
SUNSET
COIFFURES
Specialist in
Hair Cutting Styling
Permanent* Wigs
Open Thurs. Eve. by Appointment
Phone 271-4521
7007 S.W. 87th Ave.
Miami, Fla.
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
SABMUNA
ior It vii ii I ii
1843 N.E. 185th STREET
Wigs A Wigfet Sales ft Service
Complete line of
Make-Up ft Sauna Facials
Open Monday thru Saturday
Late Hitlt Thurs. and Fri.
FOR APPOINTMENTS
945-8201 ""CALL 945-9197
HOLIQAY GREETINGS
from
JOE SANTIGO
HOLLYWOOD
OPTICAL
918 E. 25th Street
HIALEAH
Phone 696-1108
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
from
WiXDWARD
Itvauly Saion
COMPLETE BEAUTY SERVICE
Color Machine Wigs and Wiglets
100*- Air Conditioned
Room 121 947-5013
16051 COLLINS AVE.
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
from
>lc\ll TV
mm hi; co.
Guaranteed Service in
Your Home or No Charge
Phone 685-2913
13215 N.W. 19th Ave.
GREETINGS
A. & B. WINICK
Auto Radiator Service
SERVICE & REPAIRS
All Work Guaranteed
ANY MAKE OF CAR
3218 N.W. 54th STREET
Ph. 633-1907
CHANUKA GREETINGS TO ALL
AVIS
Executive Car Leasing
1101 N.E. 79th STREET MIAMI
Ph. 759-4351
BERNIE BERNSTEIN, District Manager
HAPPY CHANUKA TO ALL
CAWY BOTTLING CORPORATION
875 WEST 19th STREET Hialeah Ph. 888-0332
VINCENT COSSIO, President
SEASON'S GREETINGS TO ALL
H. E. GOODMAN INS. AGENCY
ALL FORMS OF INSURANCE
8825 BISCAYNE BLVD. Ph. PL 4-3503
HOLIDAY GREETINGS TO ALL
< oiiAi. uaiiij:* pm miii.m.
Licensed & Insured PLUMBING RIPAIRS lit. 1930
HOT WATER HEATERS NEW BATH FIXTURES
GARBAGE DISPOSAL WEST1NCHUUSE AIR C0ND.
4119 Ponce de Leon Blvd. Phone 446-1414
1250 20th Street, Miami Beach
OPEN 24 HOURS A DAY
534-2194
TO ALL MOST HAPPY HOLIDAYS
SAL (HONDO'S BODY SHOP. INC.
PAINT AND BODY WORK
Our Guarantee Your Satisfaction
1900 NE 154th STREET No. Miami Beach
Ph. 947-8685
HOLIDAY GREETINGS TO ALL
YALE OGRON MFG. CO., INC.
671 W. 18th STREET Hialeah Ph. 887-2646
Mfg of Aluminum Windows & Sliding Glass Doors
HAPPY CHANUKA TO ALL
JR Handbags of Florida, Inc.
BYRON J. TOPOL
PHONE OX 1-8280
3925 E. 10th COURT
HIALEAH, FLORIDA
MX All* I OOI PRODI ITS
3615 N.W. 60th STREET
Phone NE 5-1381
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
ENNESS GARMENT CO. INC.
Fashion Mart Bldg., 221 NW 1st Court
Miami
Best Wishes for Chanuka from The Waldman Family \j
THE WALDMAN HOTEL
On the Ocean at 43rd Street

rndcry. Decent M 1MK
riday, December 9, 1966
+Jewish fh>r!dian
Page 11 -B
Catholic Jewish Ties Eyed
conversation in order to know one 1 understand, and to understand in
another better. For to know is to I to love."
Several hundred religious and
lay leaders attended Florida's first
( athoIic-Jewish Dialogue at Barry
College last week.
The dialogue was sponsored by |
the Catholic Diocese here and the
Anti-Defamation I-eague of B'nai
lirith.
Judge C. Clyde Atkins presided
M the morning session, which pre-
ceded individual workshops on a
variety of social and religious is-
sues involving Catholic-Jewish af-
fairs. In his opener, Judge Atkins
|M>inted to the Declaration on the
Relation of .the Church to Non-
Christian Religions, with emphasis
on Schema 4 and the Jews.
Camp Pinewood
Reunion Sunday
Camp Pinewood will hold its
12th annual party and camp re-
union on Sunday. 2 p.m. at the
Delano Hotel.
At the festivities, the following
impeis will receive the tradition-
al Pinewood Five-Year Blanket:
Margery Peiderman, Janet Gold-
rg. Karen Kaplan. Patricia Lee.
J.inda Tate. Chuck Schulman, and
Cathy Woolf. all of Miami Beach;
.md Michael and Michelle Greene.
Barbara Jacobson and Marilyn
Schwartz, Miami.
Eli and Fran'Meltzer and Dor-
othy and Don Michelson are direc-
tors of Camp Pinewood. Hcnuei-
sonvUle, N.C.
Go/den Agers Celebrate
Golden Age Friendship Club of
the YM and VV11A of Greater Mi-
ami will hold its annual Chanuka
I'arty on Sunday at 1:30 p.m. Tick-
et* are available at the "Y" at
K.")00 SW 8th St. The Senior Social
I Uub will hold its Chanuka party
-9, Monday. 10:30 a.m.
Dr. Joseph Lichten, director of
the Department of Intercultural
Affairs of the ADL, a pivotal
figure in Rome and the Vatican
during the Ecumenical Council,
hailed the atmosphere of relig-
ious pluralism, which "can bring
forth the dialogue movement,
and can bring our two commun-
ities together for the benefit of
the community at large."
Judge William L. Pallot. chair-
man of the Florida Region of the
Anti Defamation league of B'nai
B'rith, presided at a post-luncheon
session, where he presented Fran-
cis K. Buckley, a Catholic lay
leader and attorney.
Summation of workshop sessions I
was made late in the afternoon by |
Rev. Cyril W. Burke, O.D.. chap-1
lain of Barry College. Rev. Burke I
emphasized the need for "people-
to-people relations," and pointed I
to the fundamental similarity in
workshop conclusions. "We must,"
he said, "recogime the need to
know more about one another so
that we "ill never fear that which
is at present strange to us."
Evening sessions were convened
by Judges Atkins and Pallot. with
some 750 participants in attend-
ance. Greetings were offered by
Bishop Coleman F. Carroll, of the
Miami Diocese, and Dr. Irving
I.ehrman. spiritual leader of Tem-
ple Emanu-El.
Rev. David J. Bowman, S.J.,
member of the Bishop's Com-
mittee of Ecumenical Affairs,
Washington, D.C., emphasized
the need for young people to-
day "to be sensitized to the
viewpoint of others."
Dr. Samuel Sandmel. professor
of Bible and Hellenistic literature
at Hebrew Union College, noted
expert in the New Testament, de-
clared that "when we learn more
about our troubled past and com-
plex present, we can look forward
hopefully to the fraternal harm-
ony, which will free men to work
cooperatively for the good of all
people and the likelihood of
peace."
Dr. Lehrman told the evening
gathering that "Dialogue, as we
have already learned during the
day. does not mean the watering
down of differences. On the con-
trary, it means accepting differ-
ences and reaching across them.
"We live In a country which
encourages religious and cul-
tural pluralism and, in a theo-
logical sense, we shall continue
to speak different languages for
a long time to come.
"But there is no reason why we
can not continue this meaningful I
GREETINGS
Universal Salvage & Equipment
3273 N.W. No. River Drive 634-7744
Chanuka Greetings to the Jewish Community
SENATE HOTEL
139 N.E. 2nd AVENUE FR 4-0230
CARLOS CUERVO, Manager A Owner
A HAPPY CHANUKA TO ALL
ARCH CREEK LUMBER CO., INC.
15255 W. DIXIE HWY., No. Miami Beach Wl 7-3441

SYNOPSIS OF THE TORAH PORTION MIKETZ
His brothers bow before Joseph who is now the ruler of
Egypt.
f
"And Joseph was the governor of the land And Joseph's
brethren came, and bowed down to him" (Gen. 42. 6).
MIKETZ Two years later, Pharaoh dreamt a dream in two
slightly different versions. The dream terrified the King of
Egypt; but none of his sages could explain it satisfactorily^
Pharaoh's butler remembered Joseph's master interpretations of
dreams, and informed Pharaoh. Joseph was brought before
Pharaoh and explained the dream as forecasting seven years of
plenty that were to come to the land of Egypt, only to be suc-
ceeded by seven years of famine. He advised Pharaoh to appoint
a wise overseer to collect wheat during the years of plenty and
distribute it during the years of famine. Pharaoh appointed
Joseph himself to this post as his victory.
As Joseph had forecast, the Egyptian stores of wheat were
in great demand during the seven years of famine. Among those
who came to buy wheat in Egypt were Joseph's older brothers.
Joseph recognized them, but they did not know him. Joseph so
contrived that the brothers came to Egypt a second time, bring-
ing Benjamin, Joseph's full brother with them. Joseph received
them cordially; but then he made it seem as though Benjamin
had stolen a goblet, and insisted that he stay behind as a servant
The brothers refused to abandon Benjamin, and all decided to
return to Joseph's home.
Thii recounting of the Weekly Portion of the Law it ex-
tracted end baaed upon "The* Graphic Watery ef the Jewish
Heritage" edited by P. Wollman Tiamir, $15 Publisher Is
Shengold, and the volume it available at 27 William St., New
York S. N.Y. President of the aeeiety dlatrlbwtint the volume
h Joseph Schlang-

11 iuot. iwemDir :fll l kk
Friday, December 9, 1966
*Jenisti noricfia*7
Page 13-B
Dmyii Cariai
Nolan Altman
Mark Knobel
J%ar ^Aiitzvalt
Mark Knobel
Mark-Richard, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Martin Knobel, 1251 NE
175th St., will become Bar Mitz-
vah at the Saturday morning serv-
ices, Dec. 10, at Temple Adath
Yeshurun.
Mark is an eighth grade student
^Jit John F. Kennedy Junior High
I when he plays the sousaphone in
:he concert band. Other interests
are the Rocketry Club, football,
water sports and the clarinet.
The Oneg Shabbat following the
Friday evening service will be
held in honor of the birthday of
the Knobel'* younger son, David.
Mr and Mrs. Knobel will host
the Saturday morning Kiddush in
Mark's honor.
'Great-grandparents of the Bar
Mitzvah, Mr. "and Mrs. Ralph
Creenberger, of Miami Beach;
grandparents, Mr, and Mrs. Lewis
l Brooks, No. Miami Beach; and
grandmother, Mrs. Lena Knobel.
>f New "York, will'help celebrate
the dceasion.
The -ttelebraht will be honored
at a reception and dinner Satur-
day evening at the Carillon Hotel.
* *
Howard Bujaky
Howard,, son of-Mrs. Sylvia Bu-
jaky, will observe his Bar Mitzvah
during the Mincha service on Sat-
urday, Dec. 10, at Temple Zion.
Howard is a pupil at the Syl-
-Vania Heights School and is inter-
ested in fishing and swimming.
Mrs. Bujaky will host the Sha-
.os Si-ikId- following the service.
4 *
Jeff Spector
Jeff, son of Mrs. Faye Spector,
was Bar Mitzvah on Saturday
morning, Dec. 3, at Temple Zion.
Jeff is an eighth grade pupil at
West Miami Junior High, and is
interested in community projects.
Mrs. Spector hosted the Kid-
dush and a reception dinner at
the Famous Restaurant.
Mr. and Mrs. Alan Harris, of
Boston. Mass., grandparents of the
celebrant, were among the guests
attending the celebration.
*
David Caridi
David Henry, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Jacobo Caridi, 1271 SW 21st
Ter., will become Bar Mitzvah
at Beth David Congregation on
Saturday, Dec. 10.
David is an eighth grade student
at Shenandoah High, and has been
attending Beth David Religious
School for the past six years. His
interest lies in the area of sports.
Mrs. Gloria Caridi and Mr. and
Mrs. David Hekim,' of Colombia,
S.A.. grandparents of David, will |
attend the services and Kiddush j
sponsored by his parents.
* a
Nolan Altmart
On Saturday morning, Dec. 10,
Nolan Roger, son of Dr. and Mrs.
Donald H. Altman, will be Bar
Mitzvah at Temple Beth'Am.
Nolan, an eighth grade student
at Palmetto Junior High, is inter-
ested in science and mathematics,
and hopes to follow in his fath-
er's footsteps by pursuing a career
in medicine.
The celebrant will be honored
at a Kiddush following the Bar
Mitzvah services
*
Harold Cohen
On Saturday morning, Dec. 10,
Harold, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ken-
neth Cohen, will become Bar Mitz-
vah at Temple Zion.
Harold attends eighth grade at
Cutler Ridge Junior High. He plays
clarinet in the school band, and
is interested in boating and fly
ing.
Mr. and Mrs. Cohen will host
the Kiddush following services.
Mesivta Dinner
Slates Yeshiva
Prof. Saturday
Trustees, board of directors and
members of the Mesivta of Great-
er Miami I.oUis Merwitzer High
School were to tender a special
reception to Dr. Moses D. Tend-
ler, Talmud scholar and research
scientist, on Thursday evening at
.the Mesivta.
Dr. Tendler will be the prin-
cipal speaker and honored guest
at the school's sixth annual dinner
on Saturday night at the Fon-
tainebleau Hotel.
Friday morning. Dr. Tendler
will speak to the students of
Mesivta on the problems facing |
the modern teen-ager, and dur-
ing the afternoon hours he will
address the Hebrew Academy
students and the senior class of
the Olga and Margaret Weishaus
High School for Girls.
According to Hyman Galbut,
chairman of the dinner, "the at-
tendance will be the largest in the
school's six-year history."
Dr. Tendler is Yeshiva Univer- \
sity professor of Talmud and i
chairman of the college's Biology
Department.
Representing the more than 20
Latin American and out-of-state
students at the dinner will be
Joseph Litowich, an nili grade
student at the Mesivta, who will
speak on "What the Mesivta Has
Accomplished for Me."
Howard Bienenfeld will speak
on behalf of local students.
Cantor Abraham Seif, of Knes-
seth Israel Congregation, will con-
duct the candlelighting ceremony
in honor of Chanuka.
Participating in the dinner pro-
gram will be Max Cohen, Charles
Kalb, and Louis Pollack, chairman
of the arrangements committee.
psasT*
Rabbis Attend
Church Council
At the invitation of the Nation-
al Council of the Churches of
Christ, the Synagogue Council of
America designated five Jewish
observers to the triennial General
Assembly being held this week in
Miami Beach at the Fontainebleau
Hotel.
The Jewish delegation is headed
by Rabbi Henry Siegman. execu-
tive vice president of the Syna-
gogue Council of America. The
ether members of the delegation
are:
Rabbi Balfour Brickner, direc-
tor on interfaith activities of Re-
form Judaism for the Union of
American Hebrew Congregations;
Rabbi Irving Lehrman, Temple
EmanuEl, of Miami Beach; Rabbi
Max A. Lipschitz, Beth Torah Con-
gregation, of North Miami Beach:
and Rabbi Joseph R. Narot, Tern
pie Israel of Greater Miami.
The Synagogue Council of
America is the national coordin-
ating agency for the rabbinic and
congregational bodies of Conserva-
tive, Orthodox and Reform Juda
ism in the United States.
THERE IS
ONLY
<8J
ONE
bntainebleau
Cafr MH LlSTt* PALI*
tANOUIT MANAif)
JEHtrso* SMI'
*H THC OCB* AT 4rtTSTRBT -MIAMI -HACM.
iifciii-.......... in.....in n mi.. I IIH... i ......* '
THE
BISCAY
NE TERRACE
340 Biscayne Boulevard Miami, Florida
FACING BISCAYNE BAY
-WHIM THE STARS AND HEAVEN JOIN YOUR fESTIVITIES"
AT THE BEAUTIFUL NEWLY DECORATED & ENLARGED
STARLIGHT BALLROOM
"' r SEATING UP TO 400
ir WEDDINGS CONFIRMATIONS
ir BANQUETS RECEPTIONS
ir LUNCHEONS MEETINGS
CATERING
Strictly Kosher facilities Available Under Supervision of
RABBI TIBOR H. STERN
CALL Miss SHIRLEY, Catering Manager, FR 9-3792
*

For you who can afford the best
offers superb catering
in sumptuous settings.
DORAL HOTEL ONTHE-OCEAN
DORAL HOTEL a COUNTRY CLUB. MIAMI
TELEPHONE. MR. DAVIO KOVAC 532-3600

#
1
Have that
ilness Meeting. +
#
Special Occasion a
Banquet) or
tcial Occasion
You'll find complete
facilities to exactly satisfy
your needs in the Kismet,
Aladdin, Scheherazade and
Rubaiyat Rooms, be it for a
wedding or a private party I
^ ......inmn
for Information!
HAZEL ALLISON
Catering Director.
JE 1-6061
esin Si. a Colilm *,
\

Paqe 14-B
+Jewisi> fieriMian
Friday, December 9, 1968
Oocianf
Continued from Pago IB
ville Hotel, where they enjoyed
dinner, dancing and a show,
courtesy of the 1500 Men's Club
. There was continuous enter-
tainment throughout the cocktail
hour which preceded the show
with headliner Eddie Schaeffer,
and continuous dancing to the
Deauville Orchestra until the wee
small hours Club president,
Emanuel Mentz, relieved that
none of his little lambs strayed
b\f el C^
rove
as he shepherded every last one
back into the buses for the re-
turn trip home.
oo
This will be a happy New Year
for the Greenfield family .
Word has just been received that
Capt. David E. Greenfield will
be home from Korea any day
now His mother and two
sisters are eagerly awaiting his
return to 921 NW 174th St., N.
Miami Beach.
Dr. Eisenstein Concludes Series
Dr. Ira Eisenstein, president of
the Reconstructionist Foundation,
noted scholar, author and philos-
opher, will wind up the current
lecture series on the subject "Is
God Dead?" on Monday, 0 p.m.,
at Temple Beth Sholom, according
1o Mrs. Irving B. Kaplan, president
of Beth Sholom's Board of Edu-
cation.
Rabbi Leon Kronish. spiritual
'eader of Beth Sholom, has served
as discussion leader for the series
and will introduce Dr. Eisenstein.
burgh, University of Colorado,
Louisiana State University.
A prolific author. Dr. Eisenstein
has also published, with his wife,
many cantatas. He is the son-in-law
of Dr. Mordecai Kaplan.
HAPPY CHANUKA
LOUIS...
Your Haird resser
WHEHE INDIVIDUAL KERVICE IS GIVEN Beauty SALON
1735 CORAL WAY
SPECIALIZING IN ALL
BRANCHES OF BEAUTY
CULTURE
Phone HI 8-4328
The lecture is open to the pub-,
lie at a small admission charge.
Tickets may be obtained in the
temple office.
Dr. Eisenstein served as visiting
professor of Homiletics at the Jew-
ish Theological Seminary- in 1951,
and president of the Rabbinical
Assembly of America from 1952-
1954. He has lectured at the Uni-
versity of Chicago. Northwestern
University. University of Pitts
Harvey's Opens
On Beach Friday
Harvey's Stylist for Men. 1241
Washington Ave., will open its
new men's store location on Fri-
day.
Harvey Hirshdorf came to Mi-
ami two years ago, but saw that j
retirement was not for him.
A former salesman in men's
wear in Brooklyn, he decided to
try the restaurant business and
for a while operated Harvey's on
Bay Parkway in Brooklyn.
From this change of pace, he
became a movie player, perform-
ing as a "heavy" in two pictures.
"But the call of men's wear was
louder than any other," Hirshdorf
explained, and so he's back in the
retail men's wear business now.
The new store is next to the Cin-
ema Theatre, and will carry fine
label styles. S. T.
N. Mendelson,
Kosher Market,
Has Anniversary
N. Mendelson and Sons Inc., of
621 Washington Ave., Miami
Beach, is now marking its 20th
anniversary.
Open House was held Tuesday
evening at the firm's Corned Beef
Corner. The Miami Beach store is
newly-renovated and beautifully
decorated. It is also air-conditioned
for customer comfort.
Moats, poultry and delicates-
sen at the kosher establishment
are under the supervision of
Rabbi Joseph E. Rackovsky. N.
Mendelson and Sons is open
daily, 8 a.m. to 6 p.m., and
Sundays.
Their prime meats include stand-
ing rib roasts, delmonico steaks,
crown roasts and lamb duck roasts.
Kosher poultry includes cornish
game hens, genuine capons, tur-
keys, and Long Island ducklings.
Among delicatessen products
are corned beef, tongue, pastrami,
salami, and bologna.
A new department now offers
ready-to-serve kosher home made
cooked foods.
ST.
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
AND BEST WISHES TO ALL
Daisy's Originals, Inc.
6270 N.W. 37th AVENUE
OX 6-1430
RENATO LEVI. President
GREETINGS TO OUR MANY FRIENDS
AND POLICYHOLDERS
NEW ENGLAND LIFE
FOUNDER OF MUTUA. LIFE INSURANCE IN AMERICA 1835
GEORGE D. FARRINGTON, General Agent
1401 S.W. 1st Street
FR 1-2682
HOLIDAY GREETINGS from
YAGER SPORTSWEAR OF MIAMI, Inc.
___4593 E. 10th Avenue Ph. 688-9606
Hialeah, Florida
Tailored Fashion Sportswear To Fit Your Figure and
Your Budget. For the Active Floridian.
SHORTS SURFERS CAPRIS SKIRTS SHIFTS
AAISSY SIZES
'FASHION AT A PRICE'
WE WISH OUR JEWISH FRIENDS
A HAPPY HOLIDAY
KIM'S CHINESE RESTAURANT
LINCOLN ROAD at WEST AVENUE JE 2-9922
BEST WISHES lor a HAPPY CHANUKA
TROPiCAL OPTICAL CO.
2611 N. MIAMI AVENUE FR 3-5451
BENJAMIN KOVEN
BEST WISHES for a HAPPY CHANUKA
VOIM.lll IIOII ROOFING CO.
RAY and LEROY YOUNGBLOOD
1100 N.W. 36th STREET NE 5-2501
HOLIDAY GREETINGS from JACK BILL
163rd STREET CYCLE CENTER
formerly Located an Arthur Godfrey Rd. lor I? Years
SCHWINN ENGLISH BIKES Mechanical Repairs on All Types of Bike*
1064 N.E. 163rd St. (Opp. Beth Torah Temple) Ph. 945-4541
HOLIDAY GREETINGS TO ALL
FENIM0RE APARTMENT HOTEL
1200 EUCLID AVE. Ph. 531-9681
BEST WISHES for a HAPPY CHANUKA
GOLD POT, Inc.
Makers of Fine Jewelry
439 ARTHUR GODFREY ROAD
JE 1-6577

fndcTv.LWernU'lfl 1MB
ky, December 9, 1966
* Jewish fh>rSdliiain
Page 15-B
Auxiliary Mat'L President to Visit:
tartment of Florida Will Play Host
Department of Florida Lad-
\u.\iliary\ Jewish War Veter-
\i the U.S.A.. and its president,
Arthur (Sophia) Lee, an-
|ce the official visit to the
tment of the National Ladies'
lliary president, Mrs. Dave
cia) Kozlow, of Milwaukee,
Lc will visit the Veterans Ad-
ist rations Hospital in Coral
les.
riday, 8 p.m., the national pres-
|t will !> honored at services
iimple E:-.aiiu-El.
Iriday, a- 11 p.m., Mrs. Koz-
accomparied by. Mrs. Lee.
will speak on Larry Kings radio
program.
On Saturday, 11:30 a.m.. she
will be guest at a brunch given in
her honor at the Algiers Hotel. In
charge of reservations is Mrs. Max
Kern.
Visiting dignitaries will include
the executive staff of the Jewish
War Veterans of the Department
of Florida and Mrs. Ben Haber-
man, now of Sarasota.
Saturday evening. Mrs. Kozlow
and Mrs. Lee will participate with
various auxiliaries and posts in
social affairs.
Sunday. 9:30 a.m., Mrs. Kozlow
will be guest speaker at the De-
MKS. KOZtOW
MRS. IK
cember quarterly state meeting at
the Miami Beach Federal, 755
Washington Ave.
Monday, Mrs. Kozlow and Mrs.
Lee will arrange for a flight, to
visit with the upstate auxiliaries
in Tampa, St. Petersburg, and
Orlando.
Temple Ner Tamid Buys $203,000 in Bonds
As 500 Join In Honoring Louis Cohens
"*W* '
LAWMNCt WtMR
ist Officer
[o Talk Monday
O.awrence Weiner, trust officer
lithe Jefferson National Bank of (
'mi Beach, will be featured'
aker at the North Shore B'nai i
:th meeting at Surfside Com-'
nity Center on Monday at 8
rvine C. Spear, president of the
|e, has announced that Weiner's
lect will be "Estate Planning |
iMature Adults"
lie general public is invited.
In celebration of Israel's 18th
anniversary', and in honor of Mr.
and Mrs. Louis Cohen, members of
Temple Ner Tamid reponded to an
appeal by Habbi Eugene Labovitz
by Purchasing $203,000 in Israel
Bonds.
The occasion was Temple Ner
Tamid's Israel "Chai" Dinner of
State last Saturday night at the
: Fontainebleau Hotel.
The attendance of more rhan
500 and the total of bond pur-
chases were both records in Hie
history of the congregation's ef-
forts for Israel.
Mr. and Mrs. Cohen, veteran
leaders on behalf of the Temple
and the State of Israel, received
Israel's "Chai" Award.
Zeev Boneh, Israel's Consul Gen-
eral for Southern United States,
made the presentation.
Other program participants in-
cluded Murray Shaw, temple pres-
ident, and Sol Frankel.
Entertainment was provided by-
Jan and Lillian Bart, who present-
ed their special Yiddish-English
adaptation of "Fiddler on the
Roof."
The Menorah of Statehood cerc-
mony was conducted by Rabbi
Labovitz.
Torch bearers were Col. and
Mr- William Harris. Pilot-lighters,
were Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hersch.!
Candlelighters included Mr. and
Mrs. Maurice Zaretsky. Mr. and
Mrs. Alex T. Eig, Mrs. Sadie Tro-
sky, Mr and Mrs. Sol Frankel, Mr.
and Mrs. Julius Resnick, Mrs.
Anna C. Corrsin, Mr. and Mrs. Isi-
dore Beemar, Mrs. Helen Tuck,
Mr. and Mrs. Isidore Schachter,
Mr. Solomon Siegel, Mr. and Mrs.
Meyer Tepperman, Mr. and Mrs.
Philip Randman, Mrs. Henrietta j
Fine. Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Donen,'
Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Forer, Mr.,
and Mrs. Elgene Schwarz, Mr. and!
Mrs. Morris Rossein, Mr. and Mrs. I
Philip Shlansky and Mrs. Fannie
Sklar.
?neers to Honor Friedberg Here
[meer Women Club 1 was to
Mayshie Friedberg at an
jl thanuka party on Thurs-
7:30 p.m., in the Royal Hun-
Restaurant.
ibtrg was to be installed
honorary life member of
?r Women. He is being non-
Ion the occasion of his 85th
lay.
iberg is active in the Israel
irive, Combined Jewish Ap-
| Jewish National Fund, and
Brut.
speaker for the evening
be Rabbi Leon Kronish, of
Temple Beth bnolom.
Chairman was to be Mrs. Milton
Green, president of the Greater
M+ami Council of Pioneer Women.
Mrs. Joseph Krantz is club pres-
ident
*
Beba Idelson Chapter of Pioneer
Women will hold a Chanuka Fes-
tival on Saturday, 8 p.m., in the
DiLido Hotel.
Rue Wiesberg. chapter treasurer,
will sponsor the party. Mrs.
Michael Gibson, chapter president,
will be the chairman for the even-
ing.
a Ueii), noted Israeli aicn^boiogiac, discusses the
vations he directed at Masada with Edwin Newman,
I news correspondent, on the Eternal Light. The program,
i. 7. 11:30 a.m., this Sunday, is a jou-t presentation of the
lal Broadcasting Company and the Jewish Theological
nary of America. A him o: the die, made on location by
vT3C reiiaious programs unit, precedes the interview.
Ycdin will discuss the excavation of the ancient fortress.
Gerstein to Talk
At Beth Am
State Attorney Richard Ger-
sstein will address the Temple
Beth Am Brotherhood when it
meets for breakfast on Sunday,
10 a.m., in the Youth Lounge. His
topic will be "Whose Side Are You
On?"
Marcey Schaffer is president of
the Brotherhood.
*
A view in pictures and words
of the Yucaten peninsula will be
presented by Alfred Manheim and
Eugene Dynner before members
of the Friendship Circle of the
Temple on Tuesday evening.
The Circle is open to members
of the Temple who are 50 years,
and older. Friends are welcome,
announce,-! Henry Kauffmann and
Mrs. Juliet Burk, co-chairman of
the C.rcle's planning committee.
*
Youngsters of the Religious
School have donated gifts for the
Chanuka holiday to the Dade Coun-
ty Hearing and Speech Center.
Gifts were collected on Dec. 3 and
4 by members of Beth Am Sister-
hood.
Mrs. Alan Kessler, Sisterhood
chairman of the Center, is in
charge of the collection. Sisterhood
president is Mrs. George Malin.
Empire State Club Banquet
Empire State Club, a group of
Masons from the State of New
York now living in Florida, will
hold its annual banquet and all-
star show at the Fontainebleau
Hotel Saturday evening. Joseph
Kraus is president of the eight-
year-old club.
?l\Ml r=
J-K\brics, sji.-.
2135 Ponce de Leon
Coral Gables
Ph. 445-6166
A Happy Chanuka To All
HAMM.II
JEWELERS
MIAMI BEACH
CORAL GABLES
HOLLYWOOD
(Diplomat Hotel)
A Happy Chanuka To All
PATTERSON
PLUMBING
SERVICE, INC.
. DAY OR NIGHT .
Dial 945-0835
2645 N.E. 186 Terrace, Miami
Complete 24-Hour Plumbing Repair
Service licensed A Insured
HAPPY
CHANUKA
STAR TRAVEL
865-0357
220-71st Street
MIAMI BEACH
HAPPY CHANUKA
TO ALL
SODM. MVC.
43 N.W. 21st STREET
FR 4-5131
JOSEPH COSENTINO, Pres.
A Happy Chanukc .':
(i;lfa\
ROOFING
ROOFING
ROOF REPAIRS
7565 N.W. 24th AVE.
Ph. 759-0922
LEGAL NOTIH
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THj
ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
OF FLORIDA IN AND FOR
DADE COUNTY, IN CHANCERY
No. 66C12848
SUIT FOR DIVORCE
PATRICIA A. MINNAMON,
Plaintiff,
vs.
GEORGE MINNAMON,
Defendant.
TO: AIRMAN FIRST CLASS,
(1 ROUGE MINN AMI in
AP11334307
K2o Supply
Box "":.'
Al'u Han Francisco,
California 96274
You, GEORGE MINNAMON, Bra
hereby notified that lill "i Com-
plain) tor Divorce hai been filed
against you, and you are reaulred to
verve
lo
Oli
t m a r i
SACKS
ISADORE B 74, of 1250 Weal Ave.,
died l He cam* lure : yi. re
ago from Pittsburgh, Pa. He
vi\ .-,l bj hie lf< Sarah. a i n, 11<
, daughter, Ruth Chuald ol
brother! Ohai les of
Denver, Dr Blnion, and Max, both
of w. ii Va and I
, ma, (he Masoni and
i. with interment In
v. t. N '
LEGAL NOTICE
IN THE COUNTY JUDGE'S COuRT
IN AND FOR DADE COUNTY,
FLORIDA. IN PROBATE
No. 72999
In RE: Estate of
DOROTHY BTUDHKSKI
Deceased.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
To All Creditors and All n-
Having claims or Demands Ag Inel
Said Bsl 11
v..u are hereby notified and re-
quired to p eaenl any claims and
da whi h rou mnj have again*!
..i I HI! ''I Ii Y STCI >EN
ski del e -'! lati >! I da llountj.
i lorlda, t" the County Judges of Dade
County, and tile the sain* In dupll-
i [o\ Ided In Hot I ion 783 III,

1-ridClY.Da^kor'lfl !flP
Celebrating Victory of the Maccabees
llfewish FloiridiaHi
Miami. Florida, Friday, December 9, 1966
Section C
Chanuka Marks Reconstruction
Of Temple in Jerusalem,
Defeat of the Oppressors
Ktf
wm
m
sO
& -
V""
.*.=.?'
m
By ALFRED H. PAUL
IT is time to recall the reign of
the Hasmoncan Dynasty over
the land of Israel. We celebrate
the great miracle of the Macca
bean victory which culminated
the rcconsecration of the Tem-
ple in Jerusalem. Every Jewish
child knows how old "Mattathias
defied the Syrian conquerors in
the small town of Modin, how he
and his sons took up aims against
the Syrians, how the Hebrews in
Judea finally regained their re-
ligious freedom under the leader-
ship of Judas Maccabeus, how the
few drops of oil in the Temple
lamp burned miraculously for
eight nights. It is a story of Jew-
ish glory. What few remember
these days is that the Hasmonean
Dynasty, which started in ecstasy,
ended in agony for the Jewish
people in the Holy Land. Let's
take the story in sequence.
Mattathias of Modin was the
descendant of a man named
Ilashmon. or Asmoneus. A
Seleucid despot from Syria, sur-
named Epiphanes. had set out
not only to conquer Judea but
also to suppress that Land's re-
ligion. His troops were ordered
to Hellenize the Jews. The Syri-
ans converted the Temple in
Jerusalem into a Greek sanctu-
ary and erected altars to their
pagan gods in towns and cities
throughout Judea. meeting very
little resistance. But a country
priest at Modin. a great-grandson
of Asmoneus, showed fight
Soon, one of his sons. Judas,
nicknamed the hammer (Macca-
beus), took charge of the Jewish
army.
Three years to the date after
the Temple had been desecrated
the Temple was reconsecrated.
Using mainly what we would call
today guerilla tactics striking
by night, hiding in the caves and
hill by day the under-equipped
undcrarmed. hardly trained Jew
ish fighters defeated the highly-
Continued on Pag* 2-C

rndav. December Ml TW
Friday. December 9. 1966
+ lewis* fkrMforj
Page3-C
* The Jew and Civil Disobedience
c
LUHEN a southern Jewish merchant berates a
" visiting representative of a national Jewish
organization because that organization has sent
members to march with Negroes for civil rights
in that merchant's town, the merchant raises a
profound religious issue.
Thatassue is Hie problem of civil disobedience
and what Jewish tradition requires of the Jew in
situations of conflict between civil law and relig-
ious commitment.
It Ls true that the merchant is raising the issue
only vicariously because he clearly has not the
slightest intention of joining in such a march or of
having even the remotest connection with it. He
may have overwhelmingly practical reasons for
condemning the Jew who does march but in
view of one Reform rabbi he violates Jewish
tradition not only by rejecting a direct role in the
Negro's civil rights struggle, but even more so for
seeking to halt the marching Jew.
Critical Examination
Rabbi Samuel G. Broude, of Cleveland, has
examined the problem in a recent issue of the
Journal of the Central Conference of American
Rabbis. He opens his examination with notation of
the fact that more and more rabbis have entered
the struggle in the United States to help the Negro
attain equality of opportunity and citizenship. The
rabbis have taken part in freedom rides, sit-ins,
Continued on Page 4-C
Right is Philip E. Hoffman, attorney and
executive committee chairman of the U.S.
Realty and Investment Co. in Newark.
N.J., chairman of the board of governors
of the American Jewish Committee, meets
with Aaron Goldman, chairman of the Na-
tional Community Relations Advisory Coun-
cil. The AJC, a charter member of the
NCR AC, withdrew in 1952 and rejoined the
coordinating body of major Jewish inter-
group agencies this year.
RENT FROM
RYDER
as Low as $7 per day
Plus Milf
CHECK OUR LOWER RATES
for Week, Month, long Term.
Late Models and Sizes to Meet
Any Requirements.
LOW RATES INCLUDE
Gasoline, Service, Insurance

Pago4-C
vJenisti fhridian
Friday, December 9,
1966
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
KENTUCKY FRIED CHICKEN DINNER
3 Pieces Chicken, French Fries, Cole Slaw,
Gravy & Hot Roll $1.10
"FINGER LICKIN' GOOD"
Self-service Picnic RoomCarry Out or Eat In
Fil>)inner $1 # ea Food Dinner $1.25
16899 N.E. 15th AVE. 945-0061
* BOX BUCKET BARREL PICK IT UP
COLONEL SANDER'S
RECIPE
A HAPPY CHANUKA TO ALL OUR .
WONDERFUL CUSTOMERS AND FRIENDS
BAKERY
13349 Washington Avenue, Miami Beach
division of NEW YORK BAKERIES. INC.
"We Cater to Parties" Phone 443-4505
NEW SORRENTO RESTAURANT & COCKTAIL LOUNGE
"PLENTY Of PARKING ROOM"
3059 SW 8th STREET (on the Trail) Miami, Fla.
Italian Cuisine A Pino Air Conditioned 260 Sealing Capacity
CHANUKA GREETINGS TO ALL
WESTINGHOUSE ELECTRIC CORPORATION
TtltVISION DIVISION
3400 N.W. 31st STREET NE 3-2481
HAPPINESS is being a WESTERN GIRL
WOMEN
E XPERIENCED
S HORTHAND
TYPING
E XCELLENT
R EPLACEMENTS
N EEDED
G kACIOUS
INGENIOUS
R ELIABLE
LOYAL
Western qid
inc.
Biscayne Shopping Plaza, 561 N.E. 79th St.
751-4578
RENEE and LILO SIEBERT wish all theiir
Friends and Clients
A Happy Chanuka
'
RENEE AND LILO
A S GROOMING DIPPING ALL BREEDS
1673-75 North Miami Blvd.
(N.E. 123rd St.)
PL 9-6481
PAUL DAVIS SERVICE STATION AND GARAGE
Automatic Transmission Paint & Body Work
COMPLETE ONE-STOP Carburetor and Tune-Up
6600 SW 62nd AVE., So. Miami 661-6041
CHANUKA GREETINGS TO ALL
MILLER AND SOLOMON, INC
460 S. Dixie Highway Coral Gables
GENERAL CONTRACTORS
Phone 661-3403
To All Greetings
J. HOUSTON GRIBBLE
North Miami Tax Assessor
The Jew and Civil Disobedience
Continued from Page 3-C
pray-ins. school boycotts and freedom schools. They
have often violated local laws and have been ar
rested Xor so doing. Some of their congregants
have reacted with considerable nervousness about
such rabbinical behavior, citing statements from
some Christians to their spiritual leaders to restrict
their activities to the church and stay out of
politics.
Rabbi Broude poses a series of questions:
When is it right to defy the law of the state? Is it
even right to do so? On what basis? Who decides?
What authority does one have for knowingly and
consciously breaking a law? Is the issue one of in-
dividual conscience or does Jewish tradition impel
Jews to take a stand?
It is true that the issue is one of ultimate
loyalty, but in practical terms the question is: At
what point does the individual choose to demon-
strate which loyalty he will follow, if he feels he
must choose?
Higher Law
As a preliminary observation, Rabbi Broude
stresses that the committed individual is not
breaking the law to show his independence but to
fulfill a higher law, or to have a more just law-
enacted, or to bring about a condition of greater
freedom or justice. In addition, Rabbi Broude
holds, the person involved in civil disobedience
must be willing to accept the consequences of
breaking a law he believes to be wrong Rabhi
Broude then defines civil disobedience as an a
or an inaction, motivated by love, jn defiant
civil laws, which has as its goal the accompli^
mcnt of righteousness and justice.
Jewish lore is replete with examples of jews
Whose consciences compelled them to protest what
they considered wicked actions by those in power
One only need mention Samuel and Saul, Nathan
and David, Michah speaking against Ahab. and
others.
Determining Standards
Rabbi Broude then notes the introduction into
Jewish law of the concept of "dina d'malchuta
dina." which translates to mean that to the Jew
the law of the land in which he dwells is his law
This pronouncement made it possible for the Jewry
of third century Babylonia to accept the civil law
as binding in all matters not directly in conflict
with Jewish religious principles. As in all such
rules, the issue turned on when and how such
conflicts could arise. There are those. Rabbi Broude
notes, who argue that this principle makes any
deviation from the law of the land as not in accord
with Jewish tradition.
However, the rabbi adds, the Dina principle
was "never intended to legitimatize the civil gov-
ernment under any circumstances but only under
conditions which do not undermine the proper
"Wf C0VM THf IARW
VII COVER THf IABTH'
The Sherwin-Williams Co.
e 7814 N.E. 2nd Ave. Ph. 754-2096
1300 W. Flegler St. Ph. 377-2588
9437 Harding Ave., Miami Beach Ph. 866-5953
e 29-B Flamingo Plaza Ph. 888-5721
e 2614 Ponce de Leon Blvd. Ph. 446-2429
Best Wishes for a Very Happy Chanuka
BARTONS
Agency
DEAUVILLE HOTEL, 67th and Collins Ave., Miami Beach
NOW OPIN o beautiful candy and card jhop. Tey, Books I Records
too. And we're featuring America's great hit candy BARTON'S Conti-
nental chocolates. Come try these rich, smooth candies blended of
the finest ingredients glamour packages In the distinctive Barton
manner. Be our guest. Help yourself to the newest taste thrill.
HAPPY CHANUKA
INTERIOR CARPET & RUGS
Draperies, Bed Spreads, Living Room Furniture
F. A. Cardelli, owner
1025 N.E. 79th St.
PI 1-6538
It is again a Pleasure To Extend
Season's Greetings To All
ABE ALLEN BERG
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
ELI CRESPI'S
GATEWAY
RAMBLi:ii
1650 N.E. 163rd STREET
Ph. 945-5311
GREETINGS TO ALL
SAM BERLIN
AMBER FUEL
OIL. INC.
CULf OIL
MIAMI BEACH
538-0735
TO \U. .
SEASONS BEST WISHES
.fOHN F. ALLISON
BETTER TO SERVE YOU
MIAMI JACK SERVICE
Greeniee Equipment Pelt Cable Cutter Hydraulic Jens.
Pick Up and Delivery
IClTi liu! SSk cGuar,n,w) F*OrV Spec if let ion,
3072 N.W. 54th Street Phone 634.2224
TO ALL A HAPPY CHANUKA
CLAGGETT ELECTRIC COMPANY, Inc.
Commercial-lndustrial-Air Conditioning-Wiring
ALTERATIONS and REPAIRS.
8508 SW. 129th Ter., Perrine CE 5-3616
Holiday Greetings to All
ELECTRONIC
EQUIPMENT
COMPANY
2701 N.W. 42nd Avenue
Phone NE 5-0421
Miami. Fla.
BEST WISHES
TO OUR FRIENDS
CUSTOM MADE DRESSES
by
GINA CAMPO
1654 Lenox Avenue
Miami Beach
HAPPY CHANUKA
A&B VENETIAN
BUND CO.
VENETIAN BLINDS
and SHADES
1983 S.W. 8th St. Miami
FR 3-8039
Mr. Scott, Owner

Fndoy. December !HI I MR
. Friday, December 9,
1966
*Jmvlsti fkrHlar
Page 5-B
expression of Judaism." The question still remains:
Where is the line to be drawn?
Rabbi Broude cites some cases from the Tal
mud dealing with taxes imposed on Jews by a non-
Jewish government. The principle of Dina is ap-
plied to the effect that in every case where the
law of the kingdom is without prejudice, "it is
the law of the land." But if ot? Then the prin-
ciple of Dina does not apply.
The question addressed to the concerned Jew
is: "whose standards do you use for rendering
judgment, who possesses you, whose image do you
reflect, who is worthy of ultimate loyalty?"
But then, the question is raised, should we
not use legal means to attain a moral end? The
answer is: yes, if it is at all possible. But in times
of social crises, such as the one in which America
is now struggling with its conscience on the issues
of the rights of the dispossesed American, "it may
be necessary, paradoxically, to break the law of
the state to make it a true expression of God's
law."
What about the argument that the extremist
can and does use the same tactics? When he does.
Rabbi Broude replies, he is trying to limit or deny
rights, not to assert greater rights. "Purpose
makes all the difference."
What about the end and means issue? Not ap-
plicable, says Rabbi Broude. The issue is a con-
flict between the legal and the moral. It is pos-
sible to be legal and immoral the Nazis passed
laws and therefore it may be necessary to be
illegal to be moral. Is this then the choice? No,
says Rabbi Broude, because for the religiously-
committed Jew there is, in fact, no choice. The
principle of Dina applies as long as the law of
the land does not conflict with ultimate Jewish
loyalty, as long as it does not seek to deny God.
When law does, it must be defied.
Disobeying the law of the land may lead to
martyrdom, "the highest form of civil disobedi-
ence" and, in fact, Jewish tradition counsels Jews
to accept death rather than to commit idolatry,
incest or murder under duress.
No Mutual Ground
Carrying the matter a step further, Rabbi
Broude adds that the Jewish commitment goes
beyond situations where only Jews are involved or
where only Judaism is threatened. The obligation
of Kiddush Ha Shem, Sanctification of the Name,
"applies wherever Gods image is not permitted
to be reflected on the faces of all his children."
The Talmud, the rabbi points out. equates the
sin of shaming one's neighbor in public with that
of shedding blood. All Americans "are in daily
danger of publicly shaming our Negro neighbors
by denying them full equality of education, inte-
grated neighborhoods, freedom of movement, ade-
quate employment opportunities." Hence, the only
civil laws which can properly claim the support
of the committed Jew "are those which eliminate
this shame or at least do not permit it to prevail."
The question finally is. does a person accept
divine commandments or simply "observe laws."
There is no neutral ground.
Tfca NEW
ALL VETERANS NEWS
October itMt now available
extends Greetings to All
Jewish War Veterans
Subscription $2.00 per year. Or
gcinimtion members $1.25 year.
See your Adjutant or District
Director. At newstands 20c copy.
PHONE 445-1148
Matthew M. Sfepin, V. Pros.
Kenneth Greenberg, Sec. Treas.
TOP Off THE HOLIDAYS
WITH A .
HELICOPTER RIDE
for a breathtaking view of the
fabulous Gold Coast take a ride
in a helicopter from HELIPORT
1050 Mac ARTHUR CAUSEWAY
Hejt to Good tear Blimp Base
No Appointment Necessary
377-3344
377-0934
GREETINGS TO ALL
S. II. KRESS
A CO.
5-10-25C STORE
1201 Washington Avenue
MEETINGS TO All
Amrem Kamlt
DESK
EXCHANGE
Phone NE 44024
New and Used Office furmff
174J H.W. 35Mi STEKT
SEASONS GREETINGS and HAPPY CHANUKA
JALCO Awning & Carpet Co., Inc.
741 N.W. 54th STREET, MIAMI, FLA.
Phone PL 4-5561
Aluminum Awnings iVall-to-Wall Carpeting
SAM TRAURIG and WALTER TRAURIG
Extend Best Wishes to all their Friends for a Happy Chanuka
TRAURIG
TELEPHONE 6331537
Insurance agency, inc.
3061 NW 7th STREET SUITE 205
MIAMI. FLORIDA 33125
JlWftJ suvw
WORKS OF AIT
Furniture. Antiquei nd Curioi
INTERNATIONAL
FINE ART GALLERIES]
1228 Lincoln Rd. Miami Beach
T. SCHORR
iMlMM Phoae JE 11025
to.id.no PhMO JI 4-2501
TO ALL GREETINGS FROM
F. A. ROVIROSA, President
Narovi Shipping Corporation
GRABCOLOMBIANA (NY) INC. HAMBURG AMERICAN LINE
NORTH GERMAN LLOYD COLUMBUS LINE
PAN AMERICAN CRUISE LINES, INC.
MAMENICLINE LINE
808 N.E. 2nd AVENUE
P.O. Box 1254 Phones FR 3-9830, FR 4-8585
HAPPY CHANUKA and BEST WISHES TO ALL
UNIVERSAL BEAUTY SUPPLY CO.
2780 W. FLAGLER STREET HI 4-8281
HAPPY CHANUKA and BEST WISHES TO ALL
ART'S NURSERY and LANDSCAPE CO.
Landscape Architects t Contractor*
990 NE. 79th STREET
BERNARD E. SELEVAN
Ph. 7572551
HARVEY GOLDSTEIN
GREETINGS FOR A HAPPY CHANUKA
LULLABY PRODUCTS, INC.
HARRY BAUMANN, Pres.
4102 East 11th Ave., Hialeah MU 8-4022
CHANUKA GREETINGS TO ALL
OUR FRIENDS AND CUSTOMERS
CHARLES R. REEVES
"Ifs Sure to Please If It Comes from Reeves"
REEVES SHOES
CORRECTIVE FOOTWEAR FOR THE FAMILY
GOOD SHOES PROPERLY FITTED
MAKE BETTER FEET
838 WASHINGTON AVENUE
Miami Beach Ph. 538-8589
OPEN DAILY 10 A.M. 5:30 P.M.
TO ALL GREETINGS
DELUXE SIGN COMPANY
ELECTRIC SIGNS SALES & SERVICE
Phone 634-3233
2330 NW 27th Ave., Miami, Fla. Phone 634-3233
TO ALL HAPPY HOLIDAY
ALEX MILLIGAN
rfr Marine Surveying Organization *
Marine Insurance Surveying -^ Yacht and Vessel Surveying
Marine Consultants and Engineers ^ Appraisal and Inspection
P.O. Box 126, Gratigny Station
Miami, Florida 33168
Phone: 757-9622 Res.: 681-4368
A HAPPY CHANUKA
FLORIDA DIVISION
Mutual of Omaha Ins. Co.United Benefit Life Ins.
Phone 371-1461 805 Ainsley Building
Season's Greetings
MIAMI SPRAY CO.
1201 OPA-LOCKA BLVD. MU 5-1521
OPA-LOCKA, FLORIDA
HAPPY CHANUKA
MIAMI BEACH APARTMENT ASSN., INC
Sidney Rubinowitz, President
350 LINCOLN ROAD Phone JE 1-0876
CHANUKA GREETINGS
MILLER ROAD HARDWARE
6787 S.W. 56th STREET PHONE 661-6461
HOLIDAY GREETINGS TO ALL
Biscayne Chemical
Industries Inc.
INDUSTRIAL CHEMICALS LAUNDRY DRY CLEAN-
ING and JANITOR SUPPLIES and EQUIPMENT
LABORATORY SUPPLIES AND CHEMICALS
. SERVING ^
DADE COUNTY BHOWARD MONROE LEE
MARTIN SAINT IUCIE PALM BEACH INDIAN RIVER
200 N.E. 11th St., Miami 32, Fla. FR. 7-1421
TO ALL HOLIDAY GREETINGS
ATLAS BOLT & SCREW OF FLORIDA
Bolta Nuts Screw* Washers Expansion Bolt*
Steel Brass Stainless Aluminum
IRVING M. STERN
3675 NW 67th ST. Miami Ph. 691-4351
J

Page 6-C
*Jew/sfl Fk>rfdf*ar
Friday. December 9,
1966
FLORIDA MEDICAL LABORATORY
723 DuPont Building
6915 Red Road (212 Red Sunset Bldg.)
Greetings to All Patrons and Friends
uaves ureynouna supplies
2618 West 3rd Avenue. Hialeah
TU 80874
LEON C. McASKILL
OF
McAskill Publishing Company
3811 N. MIAMI AVENUE
Wants to Wish All of His Friends
A VERY HAPPY HOLIDAY
GREETINGS TO ALL
"WHERE TO GET THEM"
Hopkins Carter Hardware Co.
MARINE SUPPLIES PAINTS and VARNISHES FISHING TACKLE
NAUTICAL CHARTS SHIPMATE & WILLIS BOTTLED GAS
FREE PARKING and DELIVERY
3701 N.W. 21st STREET PHONE 635-7377
HAPPY CHANUKA
H. G. SIGGIA -"IT PAYS TO LOOK WELL"
MERCANTILE BARBER SHOP
MANICURIST BOOTBLACK
Call for Appointment Bank Floor Room 239
Phone: 531-1579 420 Lincoln Road
Miami Beach, Fla.
TO ALL HOLIDAY GREETINGS
FLAGLER INSURANCE
AGENCY, INC.
Donald Kaplan Marvin Haven
129 NE 79th Street Telephone PL 1-8613
HOLIDAY GREETINGS TO ALL
CASTLE HARBOR SAIL BOATS INC
RENTALS SALES
INSTRUCTION BY GEORGE AND NELL CASTLE
PEARSON ELECTRA ENSIGN HAWKS
GEO. O'DAY DAY SAILER RHODES 19
Dinner Key Charter Boat Docks Ph. 448-3212
EVENINGS 667-3954
GREETINGS TO ALL .
CHARLES1 RESTAURANT
GOOD FOOD GOOD COFFEE
CHARLES EMERSON, Owner
7121 N.W. 35th AVENUE
OX 1-6911
Home Issues Still Central in Israel
By ELIAHU SALPETER
Jerusalem
BARRING unpredictable international develop-
* merits, it may be assumed that domestic issues
will occupy the center of attention of Israelis in
the months ahead. A cut in paychecks at home
speaks louder than an atomic test in China or
the Pacific and Israelis are, not surprisingly,
watching the first with more concern than the
latter.
Last spring, with the introduction of the 1986-
67 budget, the Government initiated what it po-
litely called a "policy of economic moderation." In
plain words it meant a more stringent limit on
the expansion of public expenditure and a stronger
pressure on both the employers and the unions to
prevent major wage increases. Feeling the winds
of the slowdown in the unprecedented economic
boom, employers did not need much prodding
to oppose paying higher wages. And the Histadrut.
understanding the gravity of the situation, decided
that new wage demands must not go beyond a
six percent limit.
The central problem of Israel economy is that
its production costs are too high. As long as the
boom atmosphere prevailed, the domestic market
was willing to pay often quite unreasonable prices
for goods and services, prices that made them
unable to compete on open international markets
without direct or hidden government subsidies.
Cuts in subsidies, on one hand, and less monev
on the domestic market, on the other, quite natnr
ally resulted in a reduction of demand. This
together with the retrenchment of government
expenditure, particularly on housing, already bo
gan to result in a perceptible increase in Un-
employment.
Economic Moderation
The central^domestic issue in coming months,
therefore, is likely to be whether the government
in the face of growing unemployment, will he firm
enough to maintain the "policy of economic mod
eration" or will give in to the predictable erowui|j
pressures, loosen the reins and face the probable
danger of a major inflation. The other side of the
same coin is, some economists feel, whether the
government will show sufficient dexterity and
flexibility to prevent the new policy intended
to make Israel's economy ultimately more effi-
cient and competitive from pushing the country
into a serious business slump.
On the political front, the realignment of
party identities is likely to occupy the center of
the stage in coming months. This process started
before the 1965 elections when the secession of
the Ben-Gurion-Dayan-Peres group split the ruling
Mapai Party. It gained a major impetus more
recently when, under severe criticism. Menachem
Beigin for the first time in 18 years refused
to continue as the leader of the right wing Herat
Party which, consequently, began to show signs
TO ALL A
MOST HAPPY HOLIDAY
GARNER INSURANCE
AGENCY, INC.
(Established 1928)
GENERAL INSURANCE SURETY BONDS
MORTGAGE LOANS INVESTMENTS
8015 N.E. 2nd AVE. Ph. 757-5714
Miami, Florida
CHANUKA GREETINGS TO ALL
HIALEAH KNITTING MILLS, INC.
1100 EAST 41st STREET
HIALEAH, FLORIDA Ph. 688-4621
FLAIR MATTRESS & FURNITURE CO.
3705 N.W. 50th STREET, Miami, FU. NE 4-2585
MR. AND MRS AL GERSTEIN
Extend to All Good Wishes for a Happy Chanuka
Wait 'til you see the sensational
selection of sportswear at the
Jacqu. d. Loux Shop. 205 Mir-
acle Mile in Coral Gables. You'll
simply fall in love with their
slacks, skirts, sweaters, knit
shells and knit separates
cashmeres and woolens, tool
Allow yourself plenty of shop
ping time, because you'll prob
ably want to try on your favor
ites for sighs. Jacque de Loux
is open each Monday and Fri
day evenings til 9:00 P.M. too.
Drop in soon. Dial 445 1608
Chanuka Greetings from
III !''
slaters
caterers
2620 N.W. 27th Avenue
Miami Phone 635-6319
ROSE COOK of
MERLE NORMAN COSMETIC STUDIOS
Wishes A Very Happy Chanuka to All
7287 RED ROAD, So. MIAMI pn. 667-8193
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY CHANUKA
SCHOOL
AND SUMMER CAMP
11211 Biscayne Blvd. 757-1511
CHANUKA GREETINGS TO ALL
THE ORIGINAL
HOFFMANS
CAFETERIA
15th Street and Collins Ave. fh. 531-0357
KNOWN FOR GOOD FOOD OPEN ALL YEAR
HAPPY HOLIDAY
TARASCH
PHARMACY
18315 N.W. 7th Avenue
621-9961 NA 1-2881
A HAPPY CHANUKA
TO ALL
CENTURY
PLATING
3134 Coral Way, Miami
Phone 448-2456
"CHICKEN VILLAGE"
the Horn* of the Broatfed Chicken
380 ANDALUSIA, CORAL GABIES
Bromted Chicken Fish Platters
Romanian Steak Sandwiches
- TAKE OUT -
We Deliver and Cater
to Private Parties
Serving Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner
Clt4 Sundays
TEL. 448-9239
i
_^

Page8-C
*Jenist fJeridiar
Friday, December 9,
1966
BEST WISHES FOR A
A HAPPY CHANUKA
maule
MAULE INDUSTRIES, INC
SERVING SOUTH FLORIDA
FOR OVER FOUR DECADES
5220 Biscayne Blvd.
751-6631
TO ALL .GREETINGS
DADE PAPER & BAG CO.. IXC.
65 N.E. 23rd Street FR 9-5653
HAHKY CINIT, PretMMf
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
CARUSO ORNAMENTAL IRON WORKS
Srrving Miami far Over 30 Years
OtNAMENTAL IRON STAIR RAILINGS GATES PIPE RAIIING
2732 N.W. 34th STREET Ph. 634-6362
GREETINGS TO THE ENTIRE JEWISH COMMUNITY
ROLFES OPTICAL DISPENSARY
2340 GALIANO 446-7793
ALAMO CATERERS
Food for Thought and God said.
Let there be Light, and there was Light: and the
Candlestick was of Pure Gold.
9715 N.E. 2nd AVE., Miami Shores PL 7-6031 PL 1-4835
Trudy M. Seaton Lee M. Seaton
if* A HAPPY CHANUKA TO ALL ty
RUTH AND JACK POPICK
Mechanic's Uniform Service
2100 N.W. 1st AVENUE
Ph. FR 7-4631
HAPPY HOLIDAYS TO ALL
STEELMAN CATERERS
1009 S.W. 27th AVENUE Ph. 443-2826
GREETINGS TO ALL .
HATTON DRUG CO.
"It is our pleasure to serve you"
Dial 373-8644
2200 NW 2nd AVE. Miami
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
To All Our Friends and Patrons
W. !. FICHT
General Passenger Agent
SEABOARD RAILROAD
Major Events Since Last Chanuka
By BEN GALLOB
A regrettable shortage of reliable crystal balls
^ bedevils any and all efforts to identify the
most significant news events of any given period,
particularly the major events of Jewish life, a
most active sector of the world news scene.
If any such selection is to be meaningful, it
must distinguish between the headline-popping
but transient events and those likely to have en-
during impact on the future. But a quick review
of the immediate past with or without a crystal
ball is at least a reminder to the reader that
he has lived through a period which in due course
will enter the purview of the professional his-
torian.
Again, as for at least the past 18 years, the
two principal centers of Jewish news are the
world's two largest Jewish communities that
of the United States and of Israel.
American Jewry's Future
In the United States, the debate again waxes
hot over whether the American Jewish commun-
ity the most affluent, vigorous and secure Jewry
in history has a future. Louis Sternr a well-
known Jewish leader, told the 34th General As-
sembly of the Council of Jewish Federations and
Welfare Funds that those American Jews turning
hysterical about the "vanishing American Jew"
were usually those most distant from the realities
of participation in Jewish communal life. But Rab-
Paraguayan authorities are searching, so
far unsuccessfully, for vandals who recent-
ly smeared swastikas on a monument to
the 6,000,000 Nazi victims in the Jewish
cemetery of Asuncion, according to infor-
mation received by the World Jewish Con-
gress in New York. A number of Jewish
tombstones were also smeared, as shown
in the above picture.
bi Joachim Prinz, an equally astute participant-
observer, told a convention of the American Jew-
ish Congress, as its past president, that it
could no longer be said with certainty "that there
will always be a Judaism, that we are an eternal
people."
Similarly, a psychiatrist, Jacob Arlow has told
ICE CREAM
DAIRY PRODUCTS
Extends to All Their Jewish Friends
SINCERE WISHES
FOR A HAPPY CHANUKA
SEALTEST FOODS DIVISION
National Dairy Products Corporation
P.O. Box 52-95, Miami, Florida FR 9-6501
Extending Our Season's Greetings
to the Many People
It Has Been Our Pleasure to Serve
THREE SISTERS
418 Lincoln Road 7113 Collins Avenue
MIAMI BEACH
AND OTHER STORES THROUGHOUT FLORIDA
TO ALL HAPPY HOLIDAYS
VILLAGE FLORIST
"FLOWERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS"
838 E. 9th STREET HIALEAH
Phone 885-3231
Imperial Imports
2505 N.W. 5th AVENUE PHONE NE 3-8221
EXTENDS TO ALL FRIENDS AND CUSTOMERS
A VERY HAPPY CHANUKA
HAPPY HOLIDAY AND BEST WISHES TO ALL
ll M4.M us SHOWCASE, IXC.
3742 N.W. 80th St., Miami Phon. Oxford 6-1496
Emanuel and Ruben linger
We Are The Wall Cc/enng
Leader in ihe Soi,:h!
LMLYA\
CORTEZ
WALL-CO IMPERIAL
"WALLTEX*
"IMPERIAL SCRUB5AL
GLENDURA'
7121 N.W. 6th AVE.
PI 8-8791
CHANUKA GREETINGS
from
the
fforolt family
ARTHUR 8 RUTH
ARNOLD 8 ELLA
AUDREY 8 ANDREW
Holiday Greetings To All
Floris Groves
fltiim't linttt
t*m4*4 fruit Shippers
CANDIES JELLIES
ARCADE BLDG.
163rd St. Shopping Center
PHONE 947-6664
Sherley B. Middleman
SHERLE ASSOCIATES
Designers Decorators
Wishes Her Friends
& Clients
a Happy Chanuka
Telephone 866-8179
HAPPY HOLIDAYS
TO ALL
M&K
ANTIQUES
Retail at Wholesale Prices
4703 SW 8th Street
Phone 444-3311

*-

tnaav. n*-mh*r 'tn 1URR
Friday. December 9. 1966
*.knist> Fhridiair
a New York conference of rabbis, psychiatrists
and social workers convened to ponder the
problems of mixed marriages in the unprecedent-
ed^ open American society that if existing
trends in such marriages continued, the American
Jewish population would eventually disappear
But Philip Klutznick, lormer B'nai Briih pres-
ident, has told a Jc.vHh Welfare Board convention
that reports 0:1 the imminent uennse o: American
Jewish life we're simply nonsense. The debate
seemed certain to continue.
Among the activities of a far trom dwindling
American Jewry is a massive anu growing involve-
ment in the spreading war on poverty to which
the United uates Government was committing
more than one million doliars a year __ the first
sustained attack by any government on one of
humanity's most enduring social disca^s
Meeting the Challenge
For the Jewish community, steeped in a mil-
lenial history of effective action on behalf of the
aged, the infirm, the sick and the destitute, the
challenge is one to be met swiftly with all the
communal resources created during decades of
practical experience. In virtually every anti-poverty
program, at every level, elements of all of the
varied machinery of the Jewish community were
hard at work. Thousands of Jewish welfare and
communal specialists are active in the whole
range of anti-poverty programs and scores of Jew-
ish institutions and agencies are sites for anti-
poverty projects.
There is one area of Jewish concern for
the dispossessed in which, during the itsu, the
Page 9-B
Prof. M. C. Shelesnyak. head of the Bio-
dynamics Department of the Weizmann In-
stitute, teaches Japanese scientists Mr. and
Mrs. Tachi the latest scientific develop-
ments in birth control. Prof. Shelesnyak is
considered an expert in his field in Israel
today.
outstretched Jewish hand of help was rebuffed
and Jews became increasingly concerned about the
tone and significance of that rebuff. American
Jews have consistently aided the Negro in his
usually bitter and often deadly struggle for full
emancipation. Jews have provided the leadership
Continued on Page 10-C
A MOST HAPPY
CHANUKA
trom
KEYES
Management

Page 10-C
+Jf)*toti ftcridHan
Friday, December 1. 1968
a, *4ii B*st ava
es
DONNELLY ADVERTISING
The Donnelly Way
Of OUTDOOR
ADVERTISING
Poster and Painted Bulletin Displays in
MIAMI
FT. LAUDERDALE
Call OXford 1-8221
1790 N.W. 54th Street
Miami, Florida
GREETINGS TO ALL
LAMSON & TYRE
ELECTRIC CO., INC.
ELECTRIC CONTRACTORS
COMMERCIAL RESIDENTIAL
MAINTENANCE REPAIRS
Ph. 667-1688 5523 S.W. 8th ST.
A HAPPY HOLIDAY
CHUCK'S PAINT & BODY SHOP
Ph. 759-9741 223 N.E. 65th St., Miami
GREETINGS
SURGICAL EQUIPMENT COMPANY
4200 Estancia St. Coral Gables 4216 Ponce de Leon Blvd.
445-7841
HOSPITALS NURSING HOMES PHYSICIANS
LABORATORY SUPPLIES and EQUIPMENT
You are cordially invited to come in and browse about
CHANUKA GREETINGS FROM
Mm
IV i Lm i_j U
DISCOUNT ~^*" STORES
OVER 67 STORES
SERVING ALL OF SOUTH FLORIDA
PORTOFINO
SENDS GREETINGS TO
ALL HIS FRIENDS
GREENLEAF & CROSBY
JEWELERS
1000 LINCOLN ROAD, MIAMI BEACH
THE OLDEST JEWELERS IN FLORIDA
Quality Diamonds Since 1868, Greenleaf & Crosby ha
been famous for its outstanding collection of gem quality
diamoi ds in traditional and modern settings.
Major Events Since Last Chanuka
Continued from PaffB 9-C
in many Negro civil rights organizations and much
of their financial sinews. Two Jewish youths joined
the long list of civil rights martyrs to Southern
white racism, paying with their lives in Mississippi
for their commitment.
Yet clearly this is a time marked by growing
evidence of anti-Semitism among Negroes, par-
ticularly though by no means exclusively at
the Negro ghetto level. When Clifford Brown, edu-
cational director of the Mount Vemon. NY. chap-
ter of the Congress of Racial Equality, screamed
during a heated school board meeting on school
integration that "Hitler made one mistake when
he didn't kill enough of you," Jews inevitably
wondered for how many American Negroes this
educated middle class Negro had spoken.
Concern Continue*
CORE officials disavowed his remarks and he
resigned under pressure, but Jewish concerns were
not dispelled. Some Jewish leaders, like Dr. John
Slawson, executive vice president of the American
Jewish Committee, bluntly told Negro leaders that
anti-Semitism among Negroes is a fact, that it
had no more valid basis than the same pathology
among whites, and that the widening split be-
tween Jews and Negroes was bad for Jews, bad
for Negroes and bad for America.
Rabbi Arthur Lelyveld, in his presidential
address to fhe American Jewish Congress, has
spoken out on the issue with a warning thai inn.
dents of Negro anti-Semitism had evoked a "Jew-
ish backlash." He denounced suggestions from the
"new. isolationists jn Jewish life" that Jews should
therefore drop out of the battle for the civil
rights of American Negroes. The demand on Jews
"to remember the stranger and the oppressed,
he recalled, was "unconditional."
Another activity which occupies much if the
energies of American Jews is their cont.nuin"
pressure on Soviet leaders to alleviate the q0^
ernment-imposed difficulties on Soviet Jewry. Rv.
ports continued to emerge during the year of new
harassments on Jews in various Soviet cities while
evidence of Soviet moves in the direction if en-
abling Jews to revive their cultural and re gious
life were scanty and suspect, at best.
The pressures which American Jews mtin-
ue to bring to bear, both in mobilizing vorld
opinion and in prodding the Soviet leadership
is not, of course, exclusively an American effort!
Jews throughout the free world organized pr .tests,
collected signatures on petitions, and adopts rev-
olutions in all sorts of conventions and gath -inRs.
The Soviets indicated their sensitivity > the
unrelenting pressures in many ways. One ha.- been
a report distributed by Novosti. Soviet news ,>ency
whose news is strictly for foreign consui ition,
that sufficient matzoh had been baked last >jrin-
for all Russian Jews who wanted the unleavened
Best Wishes for a Happy Chanuka
Community Federal
Savings & Loan
Association
461 Hialeah Drive
Phone TU 7-5591
HAPPY HOLIDAYS TO THE
ENTIRE JEWISH COMMUNITY
EDWARD RADUNS
SOUTHERN MORTGAGE
ASSOCIATES
1999 S.W. 27th AVENUE
445-1596
A HAPPY CHANUKA TO ALL
SHAYNE OF MIAMI MXC.
2610 NW 5th AVENUE NE 4-9724
HENRY TAUBES MEL BRICKMAN
TO ALL HAPPY HOLIDAYS
CY mom < i: COMPANY
WHOLESALE FRUIT & VEGETABLES
1200 NW. 22nd STREET Ph. 379-2796
HAPPY CHANUKA TO ALL
VOMVORT inv.
793 West 18th St., Hialeah, Fla. TU 7-8000
H. DAVID SCHULMAN MILT POLLOCK
BISCAYNE AWNING & SHADE CO.
242 S.W. 5th STREET, MIAMI FR 3-6248
J. C. LA POINTE (Pres.)
Extends to All Happy Chanuka Greetiings
HAPPY CHANUKA and BEST WISHES TO ALL
C OKI It ll I MIIIM.
RALPH H. COKER (owner)
5845 S.W. 68th ST., MIAMI, FLA. MO 7-7579
To All Happy Holiday;
THE CHANDELIER
"Light Up Your Lif!
With Beauty"
Ladies Beauty Salon
Mary Woodall
Angela Petrozelle
12316 NW. 7th AVS
Ph. 685-1421
Greetings for a Moil
Happy Chanuka frc a
MR. and MRS.
DONALD FARBER
MR. and MRS.
MILTON RICHMOND
holiday greetin::
TO ALL
SAMjO
Sl'ORTSWEAR
MANUFACTURER
LADIES' SPORTSWEAR
375 N.W. 23rd STRE6'
Ph. 379-4612
GREETINGS
>IAIITII.V>
Flowr Shop
Our Wedding Work is Superb
Flowers tor All Occasions
"A Complete Floral Servce"
Art with Flowers
801 Arthur Godfrey Road
538-5523
MIDDY'S
MAHKIT
1435 Washington Avenue
WISH THEIR FRIENDS
AND CUSTOMERS
A HAPPY CHANUKA
t>

rndcv IW~mkr'ln 1QRR
Friday, December 9, 1966
-Jmlsti nrrHdHan
bread tor Passover. But information collected from
a-variety of sources later gave the lie to this report.
Soviet Duplicity
Another Soviet tactic was a display of willing-
ness in some Soviet embassies in Western coun-
tries to accept petitions of protest and then to
inform the protestors that all such charges were
slanders against the Soviet Union. In Mexico City,
the Soviet press attache even called a press con-
ferer.ee to deny such charges made by a group of
Mexican intellectuals.
Such tactics failed to impress many Western-
ers, .-.eluding such disparate critics as the British
Communist Party which appealed to the Soviet
Communist Party to wipe out "the last vestiges"
of anti-Semitism in the USSR and 69 United
States Senators, who last April signed a statement
pledging their "staunch support" to the American
Jewish community's protests to the Soviet Union.
There are numerous indications today of
the continued high regard of Ameriicans gen-
erally toward their Jewish neighbors. Some of
these indicators, such as the rash of "Jewish
mother" themes in books and advertising, could
only be described as vulgar, however basically-
friendly the motivation.
U.S. Policy
two major areas, the United Slates policy
tow.-d Israel totals up in the recent past to
one of ambivalence. On the positive side, the
Unfit d States announced in May it was selling
"tactical" military aircraft to Israel to prevent "a
seftonS arms imbalance" in the Middle East. This
Page 11 B
was an unmistakable reference to the unabated
flow of Soviet offensive arms pouring into Nasser's
belligerent Egypt and, to a lesser extent, into even
more bellicose Syria. The tactical aircraft are
Skyhawk jet bombers, an advanced weapon of
America's air arsenal. The transaction represented
the first sale to Israel by the United States of
offensive military planes, filling a gap in Israel's
military air capability and reminding Nasser that
Israel at last was getting a deterrent to the threat
of his Soviet-made bombers.
The United States policy on another signifi-
cant area of coopeiation was much less clear.
Soon after becoming President, Lyndon Johnson
appeared at a Wckuiann Institute dinner and an-
nounced plans for a joint United States-Israel ef-
fort to test the feasibility of harnessing nuclear
energy to the task of desalting seawater. The pro-
posal recognized Israel's extraordinary stature
for so small a nation in nuclear technology
and its need for new sources of life-giving water
for its arid wastelands.
Nuclear Proliferation
Joint American-Israeli committees went to
work on the project and the stage was reached
of preliminary plans and cost estimates. Then a
lag began to develop. Last March, reports began
to circulate that the United States, concerned
about the dangers of nuclear weapons prolifera-
tion, was trying to link its aid for the proposed
S200.000.000 nuclear desalting rjrojeet to an Israeli
commitment not to develop nuclear arms. Israel
officials repeatedly had said the nuclear plant
Continued on Page 12-C
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
To A'l Our Friends & Patrons
MIAMI BEACH
KEY SHOP
810-5th STREET
Phone 538-5409
L. H. BROWN
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
RENT
ROLLAWAY BED or
BABY BED for
Your Unexpected Guests
UNITED RENT-ALLS
of WEST MIAMI
6969 CORAL WAY
Ph. 221-6422
HAPPY HOLIDAYS
SEE-MORE
TVI*Y is ion. ln
FOP TV COLOR SEE US!
Repairs, Sales, Service
Radio Hi-Fi Stereo
Members of TESA
All WORK GUARANTEED
2124 SW 67th AVENUE
667-3706
Atr. and Mrs.
CLAUDE
RtNSHAW
wish their
many friends
a very happy
CHANUKA
To All Greetings
Marcus E. Dabbs
Dobbs United Radiator
Aireonditioning Co.
RADIATORS RECORED
REPAIRED
"Prompt Service"
590 NW 27th AVE.
NE 4-9681
AUTOMOBILE LOANS
AS LOW AS 4Vz^
MERCHANTS BANK OF MIAMI
950 RED ROAD (SW. 57th Ave. near the Trail)
Telephone MO 7-5661
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
HOWARD'S SUPER LIQUORS
Lowest PricesBest Service on Miami Beach
FREE DELIVERY IE 8-4445
515 Washington Avenue Miami Beach
HAPPY CHANUKA and BEST WISHES TO ALL
Jay Hart Original*
675 NW. 29th STREET
635-4508
HAPPY CHANUKA TO ALL
East Coast Fisheries, Inc.
360 West Flagler St.
Phone FR 3-5514
HAPPY CHANUKA TO ALL
ATLANTIC PLASTIC & ENGRAVING COMPANY
A. V. HARRISON
2945 N.E; 2nd Avenue FR 1-3806
HAPPY HOLIDAY AND BEST WISHES TO ALL
CYPRESS FURNITURE INDUSTRIES, INC.
WILLIAM PASCO
790 NW. 72nd St. 757-0341
CHANUKA GREETINGS FROM
PEGGY'S BEAUTY SALON, IXC.
1637 Washington Ave. (at Lincoln Rd.) Miami Beach JE 81665
TO ALL HOLIDAY GREETINGS
PARKS AIR CONDITIONING SERVICE
2435 N.W. 7th COURT
Phone 634-6178
HAPPY HOLIDAY AND BEST WISHES TO ALL
Hurricane Printing Company
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur J. Stern
1561 SW. 8th St., Miami 4-6702
SEASON'S GREETINGS
CITY ICE for EVERY COOLING NEED
CALL FR 3-2191
For Dealer Merchandiser in Your Neighborhood
24 hour servlCE
BLOCKS CUBES
CITY PRODUCTS CORPORATION
FiOUIDA DIVISION
931 S.W. 1st Street, Miami Phone FR 3-2191
Also Hollywood and Ft. Laudardal*
BUILDERS
APPLIANCE
SUPPLY
575 N.E. 125th STREET
Tel. 751-1912
Alma and Rudy Beauty Salon
403 Washington Ave., Miami Beach 538-1735
HAPPY HOLIDAYS TO ALL
M. B. GARRIS
CIVIL AND CONSULTING
ENGINEERS
622 S.W. 27th AVENUE
Phone HI 6-0836
To Our Many Friends and Patrons Chanuka Greetings
HOLLEMANS RESTAURANT
N.W. 79th Street at 7th Avenue
THE BEST OF FOODS WITH FRIENDLY SERVICE
Air Conditioned Popular Prices Ample Parking
HAPPY HOLIDAYS TO ALL
SOUTHERN CATERERS, INC.
BAHAMA STEAK HOUSE
AND COCKTAIL LOUNGE
CHARCOAL BROILED SPECIALTIES *
SINCE 1946
3890 N.W. 36th STREET
NE 4-9246
Block West of Miami Jai-Alai
CHANUKA GREETINGS
GLAZIER INSURANCE AGENCY, Inc.
1820 N.E. 163rd STREET NORTH MIAMI BEACH
Ph. 945-4335
HAPPY CHANUKA TO ALL
DADE REMOVAL SERVICE
Serving the Mortuary Profession
2502 N.W. 103rd STREET
Phone 758-0911

Page 12-C
+Je*i$t> Hcrktiair
Friday. December 9. 1966
i
TO ALL GREETINGS
BONACKER &
LEIGH, INC
Food Brokers
MEMBERS NATIONAL FOOD BIOKtIS ASSN.
"We Cover South Florida"
5959 N.W. 37th AVENUE
Miami, Fla.
BEST WISHES TO ALL FOR
A HAPPY CHANUKA
Florida Upholstery Supply Co.
814 N.E. First Avenue
Phones: FR 9-3431-2
TO ALL GREETINGS
JAMFS E. REARDON
VICE MAYOR
NORTH MIAMI BEACH
HAPPY HOLIDAYS
Mto\i0i:i> spray service
ROOFS PRESSURE CLEANED-GUARANTEED ROOF COATINGS
TILE-GRAVEL-SLATE ASBESTOS
99 NW 79th STREET Phone PL 8-1865
GREETINGS "ISAIAH" 53
COCONI'T GROVE
EMPLOYMENT AGENCY
DOMESTIC HELP
CABLES S.W. SECTION Mrs. Erma C. Greene (Owner)
Phone 444-1631
103 GRAND AVENUE COCONUT GROVE
Hours: 7:45 A.M. to 12 Noon 1 P.M. to 3 P.M.-Mon. thru Fri.
HOLIDAY GREETINGS TO ALL
FRANK O. PRUITT
& SONS. INC.
-INSURANCE-
350 NE 15th STREET
Phone 377-0691
BEST WISHES FOR THE HOLIDAY SEASON
FLEEMAN BUILDERS
-HUMAH BUILT MUMS UTTU BUILT"
11101 S.W. 176th STREET Ph. 235-7811
To Our Many Friends A Most Happy Holiday
Davis Boiler & Iron Works, Inc.
BOILERMAKERS AND CERTIFIED WELDERS
Ph. 377-8901 1988 N. Miami Ave.
f efJit i.n.W Briars for Sal* and Kepahi Dmy M Hi, hf A*r wfcer.
Smakttlatkt and Tmmkt
HOLIDAY GREETINGS j
CORAL GABLES ROYAL TOURS INC.
ir A COMPLETE TRAVEL SERVICE *
88 MIRACLE MILE CORAL GABLES Ph. 444-2585
To All... A Moat Happy Holiday
HOWARD S. REEDER
BROKER
600 BISCAYNE BLVD. Phone 371-8431
Major Events Since Last Chanuka
Continued from Page IK
at Dimona was being developed solely for peace-
ful purposes.
However, the fact that the Dimona plant
could produce plutonium, an essential component
of nuclear weapon output, continued to evoke
expert opinion that Israel could, if it wished, pro-
duce at least two small atomic bombs annually.
The view began growing that perhaps Israel should
look elsewhere for aid for the nuclear desalting
project and conversations were actually held with
British officials. Then the NBC television network
telecast a film report repeating the statement that
Israel could produce an atomic bomb in two years
and showing photographs of the Dimona reactor.
Tht Dimona Dilemma
Premier Eshkol accused Nasser, who had
broadcast threats of a preventive war against Is-
rael on the nuclear arms issue, of trying to divert
world attention from the dangers of existing
aggressive arms in the area provided so lib-
erally to the Arabs by the Soviet Union by talk-
ing wildly about nuclear weapons "which do not
exist in our region." At the same time, it was
reported that the United States had informed
Israelis that while it was satisfied with their as-
surances Israel had no plans to make such weap-
ons. United States financing of the nuclear de-
salting project hinged on an agreement to permit
regular inspection of the Dimona reactor.
The^ngx.t development was a loud outcry in
Israel over reports, published in New York, that
engineers of the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission
had inspected the Dimona reactor and had con-
cluded tentatively" that the plant was not pro
ducing nuclear weapons. The ensuing debate in
Israel's Parliament centered on whether the trips
by the engineers to the Dimona plant were 'visits"
or "inspections." Premier Eshkol temporarily si!
enced opposition party critics with an announce
ment that the trips were made at the Israel Gov
emment's invitation, that they were indeed "visits''
and therefoie did not infringe on Israel's so\
ereignty. There matters rested with the joint pr>>
ject completely, though presumably only temporar-
ily, stalled.
Israel sT.iggest domestic problem is a com
bination of mounting price inflation and growim
joblessness in which a rash of strikes operated ai
both cause and effect. Israel, which must export
to maintain a decent living standard, continued t)
struggle with a huge unfa\orable balance of inter
national trade, aggravated by rising costs in which
strike-eniineereti pay increases were undeniably
a factor.
A hard-nosed economic program, aimed at
linking wage increases to greater worker pr
ductivity, with special Government incentives t>
export firms and penalties for industries failing t>
The Holsum Bakers
CLtxtenas ^fjest LA/ishes
to the
for a
IT IS WITH PLEASURE WE EXTEND
HOLIDAY GREETINGS TO ALL FROM
MISHCON FAMILY
MIAMI BEACH, FLORIDA
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
PIGEONS
730 LINCOLN ROAD
JE 1-5495 Miami Beach
HAPPY CHANUKA and BEST WISHES TO ALL
CARL'S CAMERA SHOP
7401 COLLINS AVENUE UN 6-3733
Happy Holidays to All
LONDON
CITY
MEN'S SHOP
63 EAST FLAGLER ST.
Ph. 379-4806
HOLIDAY GREETINGS TO
OUR JEWISH FRIENDS
AND CUSTOMERS:
DICK MEYER
Atlantic Service Station
8620 S.W. 8th St.
221-9787
QUALITT CAKPtT AT
LOWEST POSUSLl PfflCfS
for HOTEL-MOTEL
2,000 Rolls to Choose From
CARPET YOUR ROOM
for only $40.00*
"20 sq. yds. limit
PAUL'S CARPET
WAREHOUSE
31 N.W. 23rd STREET
Phono FR 4-8435
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
TO THE ENTIRE
JEWISH COMMUNITY
KINGS STANDARD
SERVICE & GARAGE
5175 N.W. 17th AVE.
- 691-9813 -
GREETINGS ...
BILL TINDER
COIF PtOFfSSKMAl
iHmort Course
Iiimm hi Apfimtmtmt
|com>for Um of GoHino tqiri
hone Siltmoro HI 60*49
1110 AN AST AS IA AVI.

Friday, December 9, 1966
+Jmi$ti fhridHan
Patriarch of the Jewish labor movement in
America, Joseph Schlossberg, was feted
on the occasion of his 90th birthday at the
42nd annual convention of the National
Committee for Labor Israel in New York.
An active trade unionist for 75 yeais. he
was among the first Jewish labor leaders to
recognize the importance of Histadrut ir.
Israel. Left to right are Schlossberg; Jacob
S. Potofsky, president, Amalgamated Cloth-
ing Workers of America; Dr. Sol Stein,
national director, Israel Histadrut cam-
paign; and Yehoshua Levy, Histadrut
treasurer.
keep costs down and efficiency up, was prepared
by the Government. It immediately evoked hostile
cries trom Israel's labor panics. Whether Israeli
oehcateh-balanced coalition Government could
carry out such an austerity program without a
government crisis remained an unresolved issue.
Israel's Election
Israel held an election recently which
was notable mainly for the electorates rebuff to
former Premier David Ben Gurion's war against
his hand-picked successor, Premier Eshkol. Mr.
Ben-Gurions dissident Rafi Party fell far short
of the voting support its creators had hoped for
and the new Government Eshkol assembled dif-
fered little from the prior one.
This is also a time of significant travels by
Israeli leaders. Premier Eshkol made a seven-
nation tour of Africa, underlining the strong ties
Israel has built with the new African nations
through its disinterested programs of technical
aid. President Shazar wound up a triumphal tour
ot Sorth American countries and capped his jour-
ney with a visit to Washington where President
Johnson gave a dinner for the President and Mrs.
Shazar.
Israels relations with two other major powers
made news during the year. Soviet-Israel relations
remained ambiguous, though not because Israel
wanted it that way. The Soviets matched friendly
guestures with negative ones. Thus, last March,
Soviet envoy Dimitry Chuvakhin told a Tel Aviv
audience that the Soviet Union wanted solutions
of conflicts in the Middle East similar to that
Continued on Page 14-C
CHANUKA GREETINGS
from
FLORIDA EQUIPMENT
COMPANY OF MIAMI
4001 N.W. 77th AVE.
Ph. 885-3401
Miami, Fla.
GRttTINGS TO ALL
Not "Just Another" Eating Place
Kenny's Restaurant
Air Conditioned
Phone 374-4658
200 N.E. 2nd AVENUE
Open 24 Hours
MIAMI, FLORIDA
Happy Chanuka
and Best Wishes to All
BILL EISNOR,
Realtor
6878 CORAL WAY
MO 1-4245
Compliments of
PLAGER
BROS.
.1340 N.W. 27th AVE.
NE 5-0905
CHANUKA GREETINGS
HENRY'S AUTO
& TRUCK PARTS
2038 N.W. 27th Ave.
BEST WISHES
FOR THE HOLIDAYS
North Miami
General Hospital
375-Bed
Community-Oriented Hospital
1701 N.E. 127th Street
North Miami, Florida
CHANUKA GREETINGS TO ALL
DELMONICO RETIREMENT HOTEL
6393 COLLINS AVE. MIAMI BEACH
UN 5-5786
Harry & Murray Rosenberg
& families
BEST W4SHES FOR A HAPPY CHANUKA
GREETINGS TO THE JEWISH COMMUNITY
HAPPY CHANUKA
CASTLEWOOD INTERNATIONAL
CORPORATION
ond 'tis Subsidiaries
STATE LIQUOR STORES MAR-TAB VENDING
BIITIitl11
Smith Hamilton Shop
6IINDING SERVICE
231 S.W. 8th STREET 'HONE FR M5W
Page 13-B
MIAMI SANATORIUM
AND NEUROLOGY INSTITUTE
FOR TREATMENT OF NEUROLOGICAL and PSYCHIATRIC
ILLNESSES, ALCOHOL and DRUG HABITUATION
A PRlVATE^-HOSPITki; rt)R-#WVXTE PATIENTS OF
LEADING NEURO-PSYCHIATRISTS
PRIVATE ROOMS CAPACITY LIMITED
RATES ARE FLEXIBLE
7831 N.E. Miami Ct. PL 7-1824 or PL 4-5354
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
TO THE ENTIRE JEWISH COMMUNITY
SUPERIOR GAS CORP.
OF MIAMI
2850 S.W. 71st AVE.
Call 223-1261
CHANUKA GREETINGS
TO THE ENTIRE JEWISH COMMUNITY
WALTER E. HEADLEY. JR.
CHIEF OF POLICE
MIAMI. FLORIDA
Tc A!3 Out Friends and Patrons Most Happy Holidays
LANG ROOFING & TILE CO., INC.
Established 1939
ROOF REPAIRING and SHEET METAL WORK
PL 8-1009 PL 1-2878
573 N.W. 71st STREET
HAPPY HOLIDAYS
SAFWAY STEEL
PRODUCTS, INC.
MID-CITY RADIO & TV SHOP
Wishes Our Patrons a Happy Holiday
3 Month Guarantee on Work Done By Usl
9713 NE 2nd AVE. Phone PL 7-7615
GREETINGS TO ALL
CHALLENGER MARINE
CHRIS CRAFT
BISCAYNE BOULEVARD at 133rd STREET
947-4472
--------------------- it ---------------------------------------------
HAPPY CHANUK* TO ALL -
CHAPLIN FLORIST
6600 Biscayne Blvd. Miami Ph. 758-3601
-r+-
TC" ALL HAPPY HOLIDAYS
1.DA.
Al's Service Center
EXPERT GENERAL AUTOMOTIVE REPAIRS
1101 W. FLAGLER ST. I Ph. 371-3365
J

Page 14-C
SffEfTINGS TO OUI MAHY ffltkDS
3925-
Th.
v2:
The I [ialcuh
Miami Springs Rank
The North Hialcah Bank
r.n 4tthSt.,Hiilaah.FI*ri4a
AlliUiltl
The Airport Bank
Miami IMafnation
k of Miami I
lAiraart^J
Members: F*daral Dapoait Inauranca Corporation
"A FrtMMry .lr
TO ALL HOLIDAY GREETINGS
TKSeOTT FMAPOR COVBRMXG
1439 ALTON ROAD MIAMI BEACH
Phone JE 8-3308
To Our Many Friends and Patrons .. Greetings
CLARK & LEWIS CO.
WHOLESALE GROCERS
5301 NW 37th AVE.
Phone 633-0116
GREETINGS TO ALL
WHITE CASTLE RESTAURANTS
1199 N.E. 163rd ST. at 12th AVE.
also at 2698 WEST FLAGLER at 27th AVE.
Holiday Greetings to the Entire Jewish Community
KING'S STANDARD SERVICE & GARAGE
5175 NW 17th AVE. 691-9813
HAPPY CHANUKA TO ALL
Royal Kosher Meat Market
The Finest in Kosher Meats at Super Market Prices
5987 SW 8th Street Phone 667-3733
GREETINGS TO ALL
SUTTON OPTICAL SERVICE
810 LINCOLN LANE
Phone: 534-0539
GREETINGS TO ALL
MARVIN PEHR
JOHN HANCOCK MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
1190 North Miami Beach Boulevard Phono 947-3461
GREETINGS TO ALL from
ARNOLD LEDERER
METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Office: 757-8521 9990 NE 2nd Avo. Res.: 624-4072
GREETINGS TO ALL
Clyde & Nick Barber Shop
"We Need Your Head to Run Our Business"
18340 N.W. 7th AVENUE (Next to Fredericks)
GREETINGS TO ALL JOHN PUSTIZZI
ALWAYS BETTER SERVICE PLUMBING
REPAIRS REMODELING CONTRACTS
980 N.W. 182nd Street Ph. 624-5579
668 N.E. 167th Street Ph. 947-6031
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
Weis, Votoin. Cannon, Inc.
Members New York and American Stock Exchanges
- and Principal Commodity Exchanges
446 Arthur Godfrey Rd., M.B. Ph. 532-8301
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
NORMANDY CITGO SERVICE
James T. (Jim) Harbig, Dealer
2050 71st, NORMANDY ISLE PHONE 866-6370
*Jfettlsf thrfefiatv
Friday, December 9, 1
Major Events Since Last Chanuka *
Continued from Page 13-C
arranged at Tashkent, under Soviet sponsorship,
ending the Indian-Pakistan clash over Kashmir.
But when Israel took part, for the first time, in
an agricultural fair in Moscow, the Soviets told
the world about it, but suppressed all news in-
side the Soviet Union about the Israeli' presence.
Relations With Germany
Israels emotion-fraught ties with West Ger-
many chilled during the recent past. After months
of haggling. West Germany granted Israel a credit
of some $40,000,000 for 1966, in a general agree-
ment which provided for negotiations annually
for additional credits. Israelis indicated that the
credit fell well short of apparently legitimate ex-
pectations. A new dispute then developed when
Israel formally reaffirmed its support ot the
Oder-Nejsse line as the permanent boundary be-
tween Germany and postwar Poland, a delicate
issue in German politics. Dr. Rolf Pauls, Bonn's
first Ambassador to Israel, publicly criticized
Israel for that reaffirmation and, for good meas-
ure, added a complaint that Israelis did not
sufficiently appreciate West Germany's help.
Israelis reacted bitterly.
Israels relations with its Arab neighbors re-
main in a state marked by Arab verbal hos-
tility and recurrent border raids by commandoes
of El Fatah, the terrorist group, organized by the
Palestine Liberation Organization. After suffering
repeated incursions, Israel struck back twice
Home Issues Still Central in Israel
Continued from Page 7-C
cooperation between Rafi and Gahal, the parlia-
mentary union between Herut and the General
Zionists. Such cooperation was highly unlikely
as long as the now retired Herut leader Beigin.
the Commander of the terrorist'- Elzel army
during the British Mandate, was the chairman of
Gahal and his departure, therefore, should make
this development more palatable.
But the extent to which these things are -till
in flux was underscored by one of the leader- ot
the Independent Liberals (who split off. for the
second time, before the last elections from the
General Zionists). He speculated publicly thai
Beigin's departure may open the possibil.-; ol
cooperation between his party (which is part of
the government coalition) and Rafi and the Gen-
eral Zionists (who are in the Opposition).
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY CHANUKA
YOUR FULL SERVICE BANKS
AT THIS SIGN .
. READY TO SERVE YOU
PERRINE-CUTLER RIDGE BANK
FRANK ROAD AT HIBISCUS PERRINE
CARIBBEAN STATE BANK
SOUTH END CUTLER RIDGE SHOPPING CENTER
Member: FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORP.
TO ALL HAPPY HOLIDAYS
J.C.S. Engineering &
Development Corporation
"Established 1945"
Diemakers Equipment & Supplies Manufacturers
and Distributors of All Types of Springs Complete
Machine Shop Service & Commercial Heat Treating
211 WEST 22nd ST., HIALEAH
Phone 7911
HAPPY CHANUKA and BEST WISHES TO ALL
Go where the Experts ore .
Ziebart Auto-Truck Rustproofing Co.
Stop In Today or Call for Appointment
250 N.E. 61st St. 754-4271
GREETINGS
LITTLE RIVER LUMBER YARD
LUMBER AND BUILDING MATERIAL
PAINTS AND HARDWARE
7737 N.E. 2nd AVENUE
Phone 759-2404
Happy Chanuka
To All My
Clients and Friends
Stan Froinari
.11; a-o.:7
UNITED AUTO RENTALS,
INC.
1613 Alton Road
Miami Beach
Mr. and Mrs.
Nathan Spiegelman
Mr. and Mrs.
Robert I. Spiegelman
Mr. and Mrs.
Max Spiegelman
Fred and Guy Gerste -
grandchildren Stephen,
Gary, Ronnie and Larry
wish their relative;
and friends
A Happy Chanuka
GREETINGS
VENETIAN NURSING I
CONVALESCENT HOME
for Ait rrpf CASES
1330 NE Bayshore Or.
Miami 379-76*9
PW04- PltW lR*oWW
NATHAN R. SPKTOI
Dincfrt
Happy Chanuka
To All Our Friends
and Clients from
MR. and MRS.
BENJAMIN ZINN
of the
LIGHTHOUSE APARTMENTS
4730 Pinetree Drive
Miami Beach
Ph. 538-1224
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
BAKER'S
CARPET, INC.
120 N.W. 25th St.
Ph. 635-0902
John A. Baker, President
Gra.lar Miami's Oldatt A larjaat
*

liuWlWn^'IH IUR
Hay, December 9, 1966
vJewlsti ncriJiair
Page 15-B
mm OF THE VICTORY Of THE MACCABEES
haiiuka Celebrates New Temple
Continued from Pag* 2-C
\ nasty. He culminated his orgy
decreeing death for his wife
hd for her mother. The Has-
Joneans were wiped out
In between Mattathias' revolt
id the blood-bath of Herod,
ther things were happening in
ludea. The Hasmoneans, having
Jiumphed over the Syrians, did
n deed reestablish the Jewish re-
ligion. Soon, however, the Has-
loneans grew more ambitious.
They wanted to be a power in
(lie world. Some of their people
lohjected to the new policies,
[ihey insisted that the Jews re-
rfnain an isolated sect, minding
llheir own religion. The Judeans
|had gone on, logically, from re-
lligious freedom to political in-
dependence. They saw a new
i-.orld, in which new modes of
.unniunii-ation had been de-
veloped, and they wanted to play
role in that world. They
lharged the isolationists with
Ibscurantism. The isolationists
HAPPY CHANUKA
TO ALL
LARRY'S
Men's Wear
438 Arthur Godfrey Rd.
JE 8-5456
GREETINGS
ROBINSON
GALLERIES INC.
NEW LOCATION
627 So. Miami Avenue
MIAMI
Phone 374-5713
CHANUKA GREETINGS
From
It H IIA It II G.
DOYLE
Insurance
Agency
'211 S.W. 62nd AVE.
SO. MIAMI, 43
GREETINGS FROM
BILL JOHANNESBURG
KOMI
MOTORS
9201 N.W. 27th AVE.
Phone 696-4212
retorted with accusations to the
effect that the country's priestly
(and' economic) elite were flirt-
ing with death for the ancient
faith. Out of this sprang what
became the conflicting ideologies
of the Pharisees and the Sad-
'ducees. Spiritual isolation de-
manded political isolation. But
political worldliness did indeed
threaten assimilationism. The
clashes were complicated further
by greed and lust for personal
power developed by the descend-
ants of those idealistic Hasmon-
eans of the time of Mattathias.
Lesson for Us
Which was best for the
country and for its religion?
How can one compute the reck-
oning today? The historical facts
are clear. The interpretations and
the evaluations are hazy.
But, as we celebrate Chanuka,
it is worth recalling that the
heroism of Mattathias and the
bravery of his son Judas and the
joy over the miracle that oc-
curred during the reconsecration
of the Temple all of these
ended in tragedy less than a
century later.
That there is a lesson for us,
there is no doubt. Exactly what
the dimensions are of that les-
son this writer must leave to
you. Today we worry about as-
similationism through worldli-
ness and perpetuation of our
Jewish culture. Today some of
us fear theocracy and others
shudder at the thought of iso-
lationism. Today, there are still
Pharisees and Sadducees.
And some of us are content
merely to spin the dreidel and
pile the plate high with latkes
and toast and L'Chayem and
let the pundits worry.
I wouldn't advise you to bur-
den the kids with- all of this.
Chanuka is a happy festival. Let
it remain so. But like so many
things Jewish it has deep im-
plications also.
Here's to Mattathias of Modin.
He started something, indeed.
How it all ended that's an-
other story.
GREETINGS FROM
CY'S LIGHTING, INC.
514 & 516 WEST 28th ST. HI ALE AH, FLA.
DOROTHY and SIMONE GROSS
also CY'S DRY CLEANING & LAUNDRY
BEST WISHES TO ALL
ALBERTS CABINET SHOP
Custom Cabinets, Office Furniture & Mica Products
ALBERTO RODRIGUEZ, Owner
4750 EAST 10th COURT, HIALEAH TEl. 681-7901
CHANUKA GREETINGS TO ALL
OUR WONDERFUL CUSTOMERS & FRIENDS
ABBE VENETIAN BLIND, INC.
25 N.W. 19th STREET
Miami
Phone FR 9-9751
HOLIDAY GREETINGS from MR. CARLTON J. COMBS
of the
CARLTON VAULTS MNC.
3898 Shipping Ave., Coconut Grove
443-7446
TO ALL GREETINGS
Logue Brothers Paving Company
Road Building Driveways
"NO JOB TOO BIG OR TOO SMALL"
FOR SERVICE CALL 681-5471
14571 N.W. 25fh AVE. MIAMI, FLA.
COMPLIMENTS OF
RAY BOONE AIR CONDITIONING INC.
if INSTALLATION and SERVICE *
1089 S.W. 67th AVENUE Phone MO 7-3732
~t Wide* tjor
MIAMI
The Heart of Fashion
In Tropical America
NORTHSIDE FT. LAUDEROALE DADELANO
.-
HAPPY CHfflWKA GREETINGS
. TO ALL FROM
AMERICAN SAVINGS &
LOAN ASSOCIATION
OF MIAMI BEACH
SHEPARD BROAD
Chairman of the Board
MORRIS N. BROAD
President
1655 WASHINGTON AVENUE
JE 2-5566
To All Holiday Greetings
JANE S. ROBERTS
DADE COUNTY SCHOOL BOARD
TO ALL HAPPY HOLIDAYS
J. J. Brown
of
MADDUX & COMPANY
Real Estate Sales & Service
INDUSTRIAL-COMMERCIAL- FRANCHISE MOTELS
INGRAHAM BLDG. Ph. 377-0991
Alamo Caterers
FOOD FOR; THOUGHT 'and God said "Lei there
be Light, and there was Light. The Candlestick was
made of pure Gold.
9715 NE 2nd Ave., Miami Shores PL 7-6031, PL 1-4835
Trudy Seoton Lee M. Seaton
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
IE I ssi; 1.1. s Texaco Service
Expert Mechanical Work Repairs
STATION NO. 1-1065 Washington Ave. 538-4016
STATION NO. 2 501 Alton Road 538-3361
A HAPPY HOLIDAY TO ALL
COMPACT COFFEE SERViCE
OF GREATER Hf 1 .Iff. M\C.
35 N.E. 17th Street, Miami Ph. 377-8157
ABC BUSINESS FORMS
3500 N.W. 71st Street, Miami
2
Tel. 696-1060
A HAPPY CHANUKA TO ALL
I HAPPY HOLIDAYS
Doris Bernhardt, Associate
ANN-WRIGHT REPRESENTATIVES, INC.
Talesrf Representatives few Motion Pictures t Television Commercials
2721 S. Bayshore Drive; Miami Call 445-2448
GREETtNGS TO ALL '
MARGIE FREDERICK
Automatic Data Bookkeeping System Experienced in Business]
and Personal Tax Returns Notary Public Accountant
4256 E. 4th AVE., HIALEAH Ph. 887-7275
I

Pagel&C
* Jen /# ncrkSton
Friday, December 9
1966
He has a safe deposit box, ample savings, is fully insured, and his estate is in good order.
But he is threatening his family's security.
He has not yet made his cemetery arrangements. Like other
important obligations, these arrangements must not be over-
looked. If left unattended, they could cause your family unneces-
sary emotional and financial strain. By planning ahead, these
arrangements can be made with a minimum of pressure. Prices
and services can be compared in a calm, rational manner. And
difficult decisions will not be left for the family to make when they
are least prepared, financially and emotionally. If you have not
yet made your cemetery arrangements, we urge you to do so now.
Your family is certain to benefit.
MIAMI'S MOST BEAUTIFUL EXCLUSIVELY JEWISH CSMITIRY
5S05 Northwest 3rd Street Phone MO 1-7693

* 'mar. um~TiKjM- ftr loejj
^Jewish Floridian
Miami, Florida. Friday, December 9. 1966
Mid-Ei Century Polish Men.....'> From the Hebrew Union College Collection
I*
JUDAH MACCABEE REPLACED THE GREEK THEFT FROM THE TEMPLE
C77ie CZltannfta
CHANUKA menorot are proh-
ably the best-known and
most widely-used kind of cere-
monial objects. Lamps in shapes
similar to the seven-branched
Temple menorah. which Judah
Maccabee had placed in the Tem-
ple for the one stolen by the
Greeks, are found in innumer-
able Jewish households. Most
Jews believe that the present
general shape of the menorah
has been traditional since the
days of antiquity, but this is not
the case.
Because of the Talmudic pro-
scription, which forbade the
fashioning of any of the objects
which were part of the Temple,
Chanuka lamps in the periods
following the destruction of the
seeond Temple had quite a dif-
ferent shape.
During the Roman and By-
zantine periods, simple one-wick
clay oil lamps served as Chanuka
lamps. During the Middle Ages,
it became customary to fashion
a metal container for all lights
and to hang this metal bench
type lamp with a triangular back
and trefoil at its apex on the left
doorpost of the house. This form
of Chanuka lamp maintained it-
self with variations for many
centuries. Only from the 17th
century" on did it become a cus-
tom to fashion large Chanuka
lamps in shapes resembling the
seven-branched Temple meno-
rah. This type of Chanuka
menorah, of course, had two ad-
ditional light arms, and the Heb-
rew Union College Museum in
Cincinnati has a rich collection
of such menorot.
From mid-eighteenth-centurv
Poland comes this rare and un-
usual lamp of this type (shown
above), a Chanuka lamp which
once graced the home of a
wealthy Jew in Lemberg. Galicia.
and is now proudly displayed in
the Hebrew Union College Mu-
seum.
A hill alive with many varied
creatures hares, dogs, squir-
rels, and worms rests on two
joining silver bowls supported
by eight lion bodies. Out of this
whimsical hill rises a sturdy oak
tree whose boughs and branches
carry leaf-shaped holders for the
eight Chanuka candles. The
trunk >f the tree carries at its
very iop the servant light, which,
according to ancient usage, must
occupy a more elevated place
than the other lights. In the foli-
age itself a climbing boy is hid-
den. Most charming and delight-
ful is the bear climbing the
trunk of tr-? tree and anxiously
peering at the honey pot with
the buzzing bee in front, com-
pletely unaware that it is a trap
set by the waiting hunter, kneel-
ing behind the tree, with gun
aimed at the bear.
The East European peasant
motif of the bear and the honey-
must have given the children us-
ing this Chanuka lamp a great
deal of delight, for this menorah
is a truly remarkable com-
bination of the holy and the pro-
fane; the pietistic and the se-
cular. In a sense, it embodies
the very essence of the Jew's
historic experience his ability
to laugh in the context of solem-
nity.
Many other interesting objects
of Jewish ceremonial art are to
be found at the Hebrew Union
College Museum. Leon J. Ober-
mayer, of Philadelphia, is chair-
man of the Hebrew Union Col-
lege Museum Committee, and
Dr. Joseph Gutmann. of the fa-
culty of the College-Institute,
serves as curator of the museum.

Page 2-D
+Jml$t> FhridHain
Friday, December 9,
1966
f-
rovn
Ted S. Finkel
and
Gerald R. Falick
FINKEL & FALICK ASSOCIATES
PROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATION
BEST WISHES FOR CHANUKA
C*r\fstctl
5055 COLLINS AVENUE
Miami Beach
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
WOOLWORTH'S
410 Lincoln
Road
Happy Chanuka to All
MOl.\ \K*S RESTACRAXT
OPEN 7 A.M. to 9 PM
451 -41st STREET, MIAMI BEACH
GREETINGS TO ALL
MURRAY ROOF COATING CO.
Custom Roof Coating and Exclusive Silicone Process
PHONE 759-6604 FOR FREE ESTIMATE
HOLIDAY GREETINGS frorr Philip Livedis ft John Haralambides
Golden Nugget Pancake House
5330 W. FLAGLER 2700 W. FLAGLER
13001 N.W. 7th AVE NO. MIAMI
CHANUKA GREETINGS
HILTON J. LANDRY REALTY. INC.
Managemert Broker for Veterans Ad-run-sh-anon
NEW OFFICE 8922 S.W. 24th St. Phone 221-4772
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
FLV.\.\S IMMi; RIBS
Spec alizing :r R'bs Chicken Steak Key Lime Pie
15295 S. DIXIE HIGHWAY
GU'TAR LESS jr Expert tors) $2.50 Half Hour
636 East 4th Ave Hialeah Phone 887-5642
L
Chanuka and the Pursuit of Peaci
By ETHEL L. LEVEY
rCH year since., U was pub-
lished and saorfly before
Chanuka. I reread "My Glorious
Brothers." Howard Fast's mar-
velous story of the Maccabees.
I do so because it has the faculty
of reminding me of ideas that I
am apt to forget as I forge my
way from kitchen to meeting to
lecture to bridge table or where-
ever.
Active concern for the pursuit
of peace has been part of Jewish
conception since the beginning
of our history. The great Rabbi
HUM among others pointed out
that 'loving peace and pursuing
peace, both near and far" must
be a daily goal for Jews. The
road to peace, you must have
noticed, however, continues to
be barricaded by the general mis-
behavior and orneriness of hu-
man beings.
The Maccabees for sure never
started out to be anything but a
peaceful family, minding their
own business. They ended up
fighting a twenty-year war. a full
scale war. with at least twelve
major battles and as nearly as
Continued on Pag* 10-D
Jewish books, records, silver mezuzot. Stars of David and
refreshments are among the Chanuka supplies sent to Jewish
military personnel in all parts of the globe through arrange
ments made for them by the Commission of Jewish Chap-
laincy of the National Jewish Welfare Board (JWB). The tra-
ditional observance of the Festival of Lights to be conducted
by Jewish chaplains will be all the more home-like because
of the hundreds of gifts which have been shipped to them, as
well as to patients in Veterans Administration hospitals.
HAPPY CHANUKA
'Wui
IBCTnE]E<
2114 NORTHtSI fUAMI COURT MIAMI 37, FLORIDA
374-8441
imiRPRESS and LITHOGRAPHY
''Greater Miami's Friendliest Printing Plant"
Wnjfrur'
EXTENDS BEST WISHES
FOR A VERY HAPPY CHANUKA
HAPPY CHANUKA and BEST WISHES
TO ALL
RAY'S UPHOLSTERING
CUSTOM MADE FURNITURE AND DRAPERIES
Complete Interior Design Fin* Fabrics Carpet
Wallpaper Painting Professional Decorators
1728 Ponce de Leon Blvd., Coral Gables Ph. 443-7293
RAY COUSNOYER, Owner
HOLIDAY GREETINGS TO Ail .
Hugo Hair Stylist*
'01 rOVft NEW H A I STVlf
M0 7-2213 1561 Sunset Dr., C.G. (Near Red Rd.)
PASSOVER GREETINGS TO ALL
HAPPY CHANUKA TO ALL
EXP VMMl TRAILER SALES
USED TRAILERS BANK FINANCED
135 N.W. 79th STREET Phone 751-5084
GREETINGS
ENDURANCE FLOOR CO., INC.
' FlOOR COVERING CONTRACTORS"
Residential and Commercial
13900 NW 7th AVENUE Ph MU 1-4923
TO ALL
GREETINGS
.IO\ %S J.
BROTMA>
430 SEYBOLD BLDG.
MIAMI, FLA.
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
A & J
SERVICE
Lawnmower Sales & Service
Authorized Briggs & Sfrattoo,
Clinton Engines, Service Dealer
6620 S.W. 8th ST.
Phone 661-8979
HAPPY HOLIDAY
TO ALL
Propeller
Service
of Miami
Miami International Airport
Ph. 887-7581
LIBERTY MUTUAL
INSURANCE
250 Bird Road, Coral Gables
Telephone 445-1931
AUTO HOMEOWNERS
JEWELRY
See Kurt Jorgensen
CHANUKA GREETINGS
CRISSY'S WINDOW
CLEANING CO.
Office Buildings
Hotels-Motels
PROMPT SERVICE
Phone 947-0323
17070 Collins Avenue
Miami Beach

Friday, December 9, 1968
+Jewlst tk>rldUan
t
German
Jewish
Schools
By H*MAN LEVY *
FRANKFURT/MUNICH (INB)
Around 1933, there were some
130 Jewish public and private ele-
mentary, lower grade secondary
and high schools in Germany,
which were attended by 18,500
pupils.
In the course of the program
designed to exterminate the Jew-
ish population in Germany, all
these schools were closed and a
ban placed on them. It took more
than 30 years before the first Jew-
ish school could be set up again
in the Federal Republic of Ger-
many, a visible sign of progress in
\r the consolidation of Jewish life in
the Federal Republic.
Frankfurt on Main's Jewish
community was the first to re-
sume the old tradition of the
"Philanthropinum." The first
elementary school of a Jewish
post-war community was opened
on April 18, 1966 in the Main
metropolis. It consists of two
classrooms and a hall which
serves for sports purposes. The
school is accommodated in a
side-wing of the synagogue in
the Freiherr-vom Stein-Strasse.
For the time being, it consists
of two classes: one of 20 children
for the first school year and one
Continued on Page 11-D
Page 3-D
Alter lessons at the first elementary school for a Jewish post-
war community in the Federal Republic of Germany, Frank-
fort on Main, the children are led all together into the street
by their teachers, Frau Ruth Moritz and Fraulein Amalie
Berger. There are taxis waiting to drive the children, who
come from all over Frankfort. (IN-Bild)
V
0
Cordial
Best Wishes
for the
Holiday
Season
FLORIDA POWER & LIGHT COMPANY
MlUHO BUiLO FLORIDA
BEST WISHES TO ALL OUR FRIENDS
MISHAEL INCORPORATED
Manufacturer of Fine Office Furniture,
Store Fixtures and Architectural Woodwork
175 West 24th Street, Hialeah
888-4262
CHANUKA GREETINGS
THE SECOND NATIONAL BANK
OF NORTH MIAMI
BISCAYNE BLVD. at 118th ST., NORTH MIAMI 757-8411
/Member federal Deposit Insurance Corp. federal Reserve System
CHANUKA GREETINGS TO ALL
PYMS-SUCHMAN REAL ESTATE CO.
9265 S. DIXIE HWY. Ph. MO 7-6461
Specializing in Acreage, Homes, Business Property in So. Dade
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
4 IIAICHI T CHEMICAL CO.
916 5th Street, Miami Beach Phone 531-3309
CHANUKA GREETINGS
SEARLE & MORRIS INSURANCE, INC.
Alt FORMS OF INSURANCE
113 ALMERIA AVENUE C0RAI GABLES
Phone 443-2553
HAPPY CHANUKA TO ALL
Tartak-ft OPA-LOCKA DRUGS
400 Opa-locka Blvd. Phone Ml) 1-3122
Greetings
ARCO NOTIONS & TRIMMING COMPANY
Trimming for All Manufacturing Trade
Complete line for Department, Variety and Fabric Stores WHOLESALE
2661 N.W. 5th AVENUE Ph. 634-8412
MANUFACTURERS
HAPPY CHANUKA TO ALL
BOOK HORIZONS
South Campus Location Ph. 665-6161
1110 SO. DIXIE HIGHWAY (at Main Entrance of U. of Miami)
North Campus Location Ph. 681-0418
110th STREET and 27th AVE. (opposite MDJC Stadium)
To All Those Of The Jewish Faith
In Our Community We Extend
Our Sincere Good Wishes for Chanuka
MIAMI LINCOLN MERCURY
largest Dealer Smallest Prices
8101 N.W. 7th AVENUE PHONE: 757-8464
HAPPY CHANUKA GREETINGS TO ALL
DEPENDABLE PRINTING OFFSET CORP.
7701 N.W. 36th STREET Ph. 696-4651

n
Page 4-D
*-3risMr>ri
Friday, December 9,1955
TO ALL GREETINGS .
SOUTH FLORIDA
LIQUOR DISTRIBUTORS
Incorporated
"SERVICE TO YOU .
IS OUR PLEASURE"
6501 N.W. 37th AVENUE
OX 6-4440
CHANUKA GREETINGS
BISCAYNE CAFETERIAS
9900 N.E. 2nd Ave.
1917 Biscayne Blvd.
HAPPY CHANUKA TO ALL
BERNARD IITMAN
ONE HUNDRED BISCAYNE BOULEVARD, NORTH
MIAMI, FLORIDA
MASSACHUSETTS MUTUAL
Lilt Intumcr Company, Sprin/tfirU, Ma'fkutttls / orgtnittd 1151
ft
GREETINGS FROM
ENFiEED'S
4000 N.W. 30th Ave.
Ph. 633-1551
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY CHANUKA
CRAVITT-KAHN INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.
ON U.S. HIGHWAY 1 3350 SOUTH DIXIE HIGHWAY
IMMEDIATE COVERAGE BY PHONE MIAMI, FLA.
P.S. Personal Service
BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY CHANUKA
Manny's Restaurant
16S7 MERIDIAN AVENUE. MIAMI BEACH
Max and Leonard Bobuck, Owners
A HAPPY CHANUKA
FROM
Oliver Manor
Nursing Home
1255 N.E. 135th ST., N. MIAMI
PHONE 751-9791
BEST WiSHES to all for a happy CHANUKA
HARMONY FASHIONS OF MIAMI, INC.
540 N.W. 26th STREET Ph. NE 3-9854
HARRY NISSEL. President
HAPPY HOLIDAY TO ALL
BEVERAGE CANNERS, INC.
4401 E. 11th AVE., HI ALE AH MU 8-8672
I. J. Wollowick R. Wollowiclc
mmmm outlined in nm publication
French Jewish Condition Changes
By Special Report
French Jewry, under the im-
petus of widespread immigration
from North Africa, has undergone
a transformation during the past
10 years that has made it the
fourth largest Jewish community
in the world. In the process, what
was a community tending toward
assimilation has become more
aware of Judaism and Jewish tra-
dition than at any time in its re-
cent history.
The dimensions of this trans-
formation, in which the French
Jewish community has grown
from a post-World War II popula-
tion of 150,000 to more than 500,-
000, are outlined in a report just
issued by the American Jewish
Committee's European office, di-
rected by Zachariah Shuster.
With it has appeared
64-page guide to Hie Jewish com-
munities of France, prepared by
the Community Service, 'which
AJC set up in 1958 in coopera-
tion with the Angle Jewish Asso-
ciation of Britain and the French
Alliance Israelite Universelle to
help spur a sense of Jewish
identity mor\g Europe's surviv-
ing J
The report and the booklet were
submitted at a recent meeting of
the national executive board of the
American Jewish Committee, the
human relations agency's top
policy-making board, by Richard
Maass. chairman of its Foreign Re-
lations Committee.
The influx of emigres from
North Africa has resulted in a
dramatic change in the composi-
tion of France's Jewish com-
munity. Where once it was pre-
dominantly European (Ashkenasi),
it has become at least 50 per cent
North African Sephardic, the lat-
ter being more Orthodox in out-
look.
Nonetheless, the report pointed
out, the North African Jews have
been integrating well into French
Jewish life, for several reasons:
They speak the same language
French and many of the
emigres have been educated in
French schools.
e They have had business ties
with metropolitan France in the
past.
A large number of the emigres
are well-educated, coming from up-
per socio-economic levels, and arc
marrying native French Jews.
HAPPY CHANUKA and BEST WISHES
bernardo inc.
fashions in elegance
CREATORS OF FINE SPORTSWEAR FOR WOMEN
SHIFTS and SWIMWEAR
distributed internationally
2801 N.W. 3rd AVENUE, MIAMI, FLORIDA 634-9758
shirtales by sherma
CHANUKA GREETINGS
ABERBACHS
Miami Beach's Only Complete Photo 8 Art Supplier
Ph. JE 2-2716 466 Arthur Godfrey Road
Miami Beach 40, Florida
Groveland Products Company. Inc.
Extends Greetings of the Season to Its Friends and Potions
600 N.W. 10th STREET Telephone FR 3-6332
BEST WISHES for a
HAPPY HOLIDAY
ALLIED STEEL PRODUCTS
7800 NW 37th AVENUE
Miami, Florida
BEST WISHES for a HAPPY CHANUKA
Service First Insurance Agency
2497 N.W. 7th AVE. 635-7507
Mr. Jim tevtniM
BEST WISHES FOR THE HOLIDAYS
MIAMI PLAYWEAR
MFG. CO.. INC.
4619 EAST 10th AVENUE
Hialeah
Phone MU 1-2051
LAVIGNE ELECTRIC CO.
Established in 192<
INDUSTRIAL COMMERCIAL RESIDENTIAL
3640 NW 48th STREET Miami, R. NE 4^591
While there are also prob.
Urns of national integration _
amen*; thorn an .cote housing
shortage and competition (or
jabs In general the French
population as a whole and its
government art roportod to hay*
boon gonorous and helpful i0.
ward both *he Jewish and non-
Jewish emigres.
This has been accompanied by
increased attention focused on
French Jews, the report added,
pointing as illustration to the sit-
uation in French cultural areas.
For example, the most prestige-
laden of the French literary priies,
the Goncourt, on three recent oc-
casions has gone to Jewish authors
writing on Jewish subjects. Almost
any book on Israel chalks up ex-
cellent sales.
Further, events like the Eich-
maun trial, the dispute around the
Hochhuth play, "The Deputy," and
the Vatican Council's deliberations
on the so-called "'Jewish decree"
were subjects of considerable dis-
cussion in France. Such general in-
terest is reflected in everyday
events as well, with leading French
newspapers treating Jewish com
munity news as general news
A HAPPY
CHANUKA
ALLSTATE
CARPET SERVICE. INC.
371-7604
1036 No. Miami Avenue
Miami. Florida
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
I
from
YOUNG
AGES
604 LINCOLN ROAD
ELI LINIADO
HAPPY CHANUKA
TO ALL from
Mr. t Mrs. Sum Zucci
of
SAM'S
PICTURE FRAMING
13030 N.W. 7m AVE.
681-5211
A Happy Chanuka to All
S. Z. BENNETT, M.A.I.
I EMM. AppfMMf C*!iulti>t
307 Ainsley Bldg.
Phone 3711639
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
Tropical
Paper Box Co.
Manufacturers of
ARTISTIC PAPER BOXES
Miami Internat'l. Air Depot
Bldg. 144 Ph. TU 8-8459
Miami

iov. December MM IJJRR

Friday, December 9, 1966

an old practice in the United
itajtes _hu) ;'ao0thing new 1n
France: *
The AJC report points out that
the--infusion -uf North African
emigres" iWVthe'rttlfch*U#irth
fabric Iras Sffectert nstttfe fKnvh
Jewry ae Vtoltvifi the -past. *h per
\ awoeness-'ffnd* *ppea 1-ef Freflth
culture. emphasized by the na-
tional' homogeneity of the French
edntatimiai system, often went
harrd in- hand with a loss of Jew
ish knowledge and the withdrawal
from Jewish tradition. Today,
though, the entire French Jewish
community native as well as those
recently arrived, is reaffirming its
Jcwishness.
Soma indication of the growth
of Jewish communal agencies is
indicated in the new Community
Service booklet which describes
in detail all known Jewish com-
munities, in France, listing
where available such services as
a ^ Jewish religious organizations,
' I "* schools, cultural organizations,
youth clubs,' residence for youth,
social services, medical service,
canteens, synagogues, and prin-
cipal Jewish newpapers and
periodicals.

A previous issue of the guide, is-
sued in 1961, found 23 towns in
the Park region where some form
of Jewish activity existed, much of
it desultory. Today the same area
lists 44 active Jewish communities.
And where in 1961 the French pro-
vinces excluding Alsace-Lor-
raine, which has remained rela-
tively stable listed 70 Jewish
communities of which 37 had a
rabbi or cantor, today these pro-
vinces include 91 Jewish com-
munities, of which 54 have a rabbi
or cantor.
More than half of France's 500,
000 Jews, the booklet states, reside
in Paris and its suburbs. Other
+Jew!st fhridi&r
Page 5-D
"*'V*.>--"'
J&
SMEfT---------
PARIS*
$ new
T."~. _* SL"*"--------r
**, h r-m*t '' w \ if
SiJlof *
***> ef-IItU j, J
* / cOLMAft
BEIFORT -A J
--'..,-*%
9MMMp
/
JIJON

Page 6-D
* Jem all ncrk/iar
Friday, December 9, 1966
GREETINGS .
iLsVlarvei
16 Miracle Mile Coral Gables
Ph. 445-7737
caQUISITE FURS
nANDBAGS
SUPERIOR STYLING
ACCESSORIES
The Ultimate In Custom Dry Cleaning
Fur Storage
GREETINGS TO ALL
JOHN STKITMW MEATS
164 N.E. 54th STREET
ORDER NOW Ph. 754-3569
CHANUKA GREETINGS TO ALL
WEST INDIES FRUIT COMPANY
1301 S.W. 1st STREET
Phone 371-8473
TO ALL HAPPY HOLIDAYS
CARL'S DRIVE-IN TELEVISION
AND RADIO SERVICE
"WE SERVE YOU BETTER"
1 GLEN ROYAL PARKWAY (22nd & Flagler)
Phone 634-8402
KVA>*S MIOICI I 1M CLEANERS
CLEANERS OF DISTINCTION QUALITY WORKMANSHIP
PROMPT SERVICE
8020 NE 4th AVENUE PL 8-4537
A HAPPY CHANUKA
CADILLAC COSMETICS & PERFUMES
280 WEST 24th- STREET HIALEAH
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Klein Ttt 7-8833
TOIN & TOBIN
Insurance Agency, Inc.
JACK TOBIN LEONARD TOBIN
NORMAN HOFFMAN
Insurance Mortgages
3915 Biscay no Boulevard. Miami
Telephone 377-8151
CHANUKA GREETINGS
For the Finest Apartment at Moderate Rates
Bonded Rental Agency, Inc.
Managing and Maintaining More than 10,000 Housing Units
In Dade and Broward Counties 9 Convenient Locations
MAIN OFFICE
4150 NW 7fh Ave., Miami Ph. 759-8733
1163 NW 3rd Ave*,. Miami. Ph. 373-8416
L. L, BROOKS, President
HAPPY CHANUKA TO ALL
RIVIERA TILE &
TERRAZZO, INC.
9930 S.W. 168th Terrace. Miami
CE 5-7441
The Intellectual's Happy Exercise
^^^ By HOWARD AMES
A RE you tired of the cliches surrounding us on
such subjects as "Who's a Jew?" the "Van-
ishing Jew," "Is God Dead?" "The Jew and Ecu-
menicity," etc., etc., ad nauseum? I am too. This
year, during the holidays, I'm going to escape from
all that by returning for the period to my home
town.
Let me tell you about my home town. It's a
city of 300,000-plus population, where the Jews
have numbered about 20,000 give or take a
minyan fpr fifty years or so. Last year, I visited
the home town hereafter referred to as H.T.
because one of my brothers, the only one of eight
born there, still lives in HT. A couple of days
after my arrival prior to the holidays, I went
about a tour of the places I knew and loved
as a kid.
Mora Nostalgia
First I was shocked. Not one of those places
was recognizable. My late father's little old syna-
gogue, where the most zealous group of hassidim
worshiped, was, true, still there. It had stayed on
through all the years, at its original locale now
a solid Negro neighborhood. Its president was
still Ls this year a wealthy industrialist who is
the grandson of one of the original founders.
There may be more nostalgia there today than
hassidism; but the shul is still functioning, even
though many of its leading baal habatim. unlike
their grandparents, come to worship in fancj cars
which they park around the corner before walking
solemnly a block or two to services.
But not another of the old landmarks wag
found on my tour. Beth Uainudio.-h Hagodol, the
fanciest Orthodox shul in our section of the city
is now in the suburbs. The old Yiddish school
run by the Poale Zion. is gone. The YM-YWHA
is now an integrated community center. Even the
Reform temple has moved, and the beautiful syna-
gogue built in our town by what was the "Now"
denomination in my youth, the Conservatives _
had been turned into a movie house. It was dis-
concerting, to say the least
Population Changes
My brother, however, started driving me
around. I found every one of these institutions
functioning. They were in different locations
but they were far from dead.
H.T. had not grown in overall population
any more than the Jewish sectors had grown in
number in many years, but the character of the
population had altered. About three-quarters of
the Jewish neighborhoods that I knew as I was
growing up in H.T. were now areas occupied by
Negroes. Some of the areas wore slums, but not
all. I found the house in which I had been born
turned now. int) an Abyssinian church. There were
three or four new, handsome homes on the -Heel,
GREETINGS TO ALL
LITTLE AUDREY'S PET CENTER
ALL AKC BREEDS
PETS & PET SUPPLIES
GROOMING BOARDING
FREE PICKUP & DELIVERY PAYMENT PLAN
5824 SOUTH DIXIE HWY., N. MIAMI Phone 667-7300
-v
ARTHUR KAPLAN
and
HENRY S. GREENBAUM
Extend Chanuka Greetings to All
ARTHUR'S WHOLESALE JEWELRY CO.
379-0402
Henry Weiss, CLU.
GENERAL AGENT
BERKSHIRE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
Pittsfield, Massachusetts A Mutual Company Founded 1851
1401 S.W. First St., Miami, Fla. 3*135 Bus.: 3734504
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
MIAMI BEACH ELECTRIC CO.
1226 NORMANDY DRIVE MIAMI BEACH
Call 864-4929
HOLIDAY GREETINGS from
GILBERT ROOFING CO.. INC.
REBOOTING REPAIR ON ALL TYPES OF ROOFS
Gutters A Down Spouts a Specialty
DAY OR NIGHT 7 DAY* A WEEK
754-3505
20 YEARS' EXPERIENCE
HAPPY CHANUKA
CARPET MART
970 S.W. 8th Street
LOUIS & MARY PLOTKIN
Owners
Phone FR 3-0574
GREETINGS!
DORWINS
IVY SHOP
"Smart Shop for Young Men"
1574.Washington Ave.
Miami Beach 532-4061
To All A Mart Happy
Happy Chanuka
EngdTs
Men's Shop
1201 PONCE BE LEON BLVD.
COtAl OAM.ES Ph. HI *-*m
CHANUKA
GREETINGS
from
AUTOMATIC
GAS
SY REESE
13090 N.W. 71h Ave.
MU 1-4638
Holiday Greetings to AM
SUNSHINE of MIAMI
CAP MFG. CO.
MORRIS GOLDWAG
All Kinds of Caps for
Men, Woman. Children
3Q2 S.W. 6* ST.
Miami Ph. 371-4652

I IIBP
Friday. December 9, 1966
V
still shaded by maples that were saplings when I
was a boy.
Quantitatively, there are as many Jews in H T
as there used to be. But qualitatively, it seemed
to me, the Jewish community was livelier, more
dynamic, even more unified than it had been in
my youth when the Orthodox of East European
stock did not speak to and were not spoken to
by the German descended Reform, whjle both
sides laughed at the nouveau riche Conservatives.
The Zionists are more active today than they
ever were. Fund-raising for Jewish eauses is on a
much higher level now than it ever was and
much more .lucrative. Jewish cultural activities
are much richer. As for Jewish education the
old Talmud Torah is now an integrated nursery
school, but the enrollment in the Jewish schools
around town had multiplied roughly tenfold since
I had studied at the old Talmud Torah.
Vanishing? Far from it.
No Fancy Ttrms
I started checking on some of my old school-
mates. Several of them are rabbis one Orthodox,
one Conservative, three Reform. Only one lives
and leads in H.T., but the others, scattered around
the country, arc better Jews now than they were
when, as kids, they played hookey from their
fathers' synagogues, even during the High Holv
Days.
Who's a Jew? The grandsons and the^grand-
daughters are.
Ecumenicity? We didn't know that fancy term
then. But I still recall that the building housing
my own father's ha.ssidic shul had been sold to his
Jenis it rkuridrian
Edward M. M. Warburg (left), retiring chair-
man of the Joint Distribution Committee,
congratulates his successor, Louis Broido,
who was elected chairman at the 51st an-
nual meeting of JDC in New York. Broido
ing the outgoing Hebrew Year 5726. Broido
is Commissioner of the Department of Com-
merce and Industrial Development of New
York City.
congregation by the minister of a Lutheran church
for exactly one dollar.
If God is dead He is very much alive in
I IT.
CHANUKA GREETINGS
RICHTERS
JEWELRY CO.. Inc.
ISO E. Flaqler Street
PHONE Fit 3.2197
Happy Chanuka To All
GOMMGHTEP
linos., misc.
Land Clearing, Paving ft
Heavy Equipment Rental
10470 S.W. 187th STREET
CE 5-1206 -CE 5-3722
Perrine, Fla.
CHANUKA GREETINGS
JOE WELCH
MOVING & STORAGE
DAILY trips, Cocoa, Orlando,
Tampa, Keys. Local, long
distance low rates.
Vault storage.
Ph. 635-2461
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
TO OUR FRIENDS
AND CUSTOMERS
NEIL'S
Atlantic Service]
9798 Bird Road
DIAL 221-9992
CHANUKA GREETINGS
TO ALL
AIRLINES
RENT-A-CAR
Ph. 634-8585
2699 N.W. 42 AVE.
To All Our Wonderful Friends
We Wish a Happy Chanuka Holiday
The Morrin Iatiivvs
Harry Zwkorman
Famous Restaurant
671 Washington Ave.
Miami Beach
GREETINGS from
The Riehard A. Lvariu Studio
FOR QUALITY and SERVICE in UPHOLSTERY, DON'T HESITATE
CALL: 759-4071 95 N.E. 36th STREET
TO ALL .GREETINGS
Dixie Gas Corporation
Moo Longer
6394 So. Dixie Hwy., So. Miami Ph. 667-2533
NOW OPEN!
THE DANIA PALACE
OF JAI ALAI
MAZEL TOV!
Phone 945-4345 949-2424
U.S. No. 1, or A-No. 1-A, Dania, Florida
A HAPPY CHANUKA
ADVERTISING MATS
Plastic Ad Plates Thermo Set Printing Plates
Electrotypes Stereotypes Printing Plate Service
PRINTING PLATE SERVICE
GIEGEIt ELECTRO & MAT SERVICE CO.
636 S.W. 2nd AVENUE Phone 377-0529
HAPPY CHANUKA TO ALL
UNITED SHOE REPAIR
1627 EUCLID AVE., MIAMI BEACH
Phone 538-5303
Page 7-D
^l^cst LUishcs lor a
FROM THE
OFFICERS and
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
OF
INTERNATIONAL BANK
OF MIAMI
S.W. 27th Avenue at 7th Street
(just off the trail)
Phone 445-5341
VAN'S EQUIPMENT RENTALS
MACHINERY RENTALS
Fork lift Trucks Air Hammers
Concrete Saws Generators, Etc.
Daily, Weekly & Monthly Rentals
WE DELIVER
1830 N.W. 20th Street Phone NE 5-8712
BEST WISHES TO ALL
For a
VERY HAPPY CHANUKA
Westchester National
Bank of Dade County
8585 CORAL WAY
MIAMI
CHANUKA GREETINGS
To All Our Friends and Customers
EDWARD DON & CO.
1550 N. Miami Ave.
TO ALL GREETINGS
BAC CONSTRUCTION. INC.
ENGINEERING CONTRACTORS
744 NW 72nd AVE. CA 6-1222
SEWERS & WATER SPECIALISTS
John Aiello
Victor I. Buscaino

Page 8-D
+Jeisli ftcrktian
Friday. December 9, 1966
Chanuka Means Many
Things to Suburbanite
By BEN G. FRANK
WE5TFIELD, N.J. To the
more than 800 Jewish fam-
ilies in this suburban town
only a 40 minute drive from New
York City Chanuka means
many things.
Like thousands of Jewish fam-
ilies throughout the United
States and Canada, Chanuka in
this suburban town means light-
ing candles; giving the children
gilts; holding parties with de-
licious latkes; special meetings
and events; Temple services and
programs, decorative menorahs
in their windows.
And like hundreds of other
small towns and suburban areas
where Jews have recently settled,
new institutions and ways of cele-
brating this holiday on a com-
munity level are still being ex-
plored.
Out of Proportion
Moreover, this Jewish commun-
ity again like other commun-
ities at Chanuka-time also re-
acts to Christmas celebrations.
Herbert Ross, past president of
the B'nai B'rith lodge here, and
active in the Jewish community
in the area, put it this way:
"Chanuka has grown out of pro-
portion to what it really is, a
minor Jewish festival. Today it is
celebrated here as a major Jew-
ish holiday because it seems to
be a reaction to Christmas cele-
brations."
Chanuka, as we said, is cele-
brated in many ways here. The
Young Judaea group, for in-
stance, besides its Chanuka
meeting, will travel to New York
City to join with other Judaeans
in a program for Soviet Jewry
and Human Rights. After all,
they say, Chanuka stands for
freedom and independence, too.
David Berg, national president
of Young Judaea, said that most
of the Christian student body
knows it's Chanuka for the Jewish
boys and girls. "When they give
a gift to a Jewish youth, they
say they're giving a 'Chanuka'
gift." said David, who lives
here.
For the Kids
At Chanuka-time, much, of
course, is done for the kids. Ross
said that "a lot of what is done
is to satisfy and help the chil-
dren."
There will be parties and ex-
planations of Chanuka at the
Hebrew school and Temple
Emanu-El makes a special point
of sending home with each child
a box of Chanuka candles. It is
a pretty good bet that most Jew-
ish families in Westfield light
these candles, many with the
idea that they're doing it for the
youngsters.
Chanuka is tied in with other
community events, too. For in-
stance, the children of the Tem-
ple's Hebrew School will place
mezzuzoth on the doors of the
rooms of the new addition to the
building. After all, said Rabbi
Charles Kroloff of Temple
Emanu-El. Chanuka means "dedi-
Continued on Pao, 14-D
CHARLES TUCKER
BEST WISHES
FOR A
HAPPY CHANUKA
HOLIDAY
/. A. T.
Company, Inc.
Suitcraft for Town and Travel
2621 N.W. 2nd AVENUE
Ph. 633-3293
JULIE TUCKER
J$est (AJishes for 4
*^J~tappu ^shanttha
The First National Bank
of
Homestead, Florida
4 SOUTH KROME AVENUE
Phone CE 8-0246
CHANUKA GREETINGS
from
HAROLD & BOB GRUDER
of the
MONACO
MOTEL
17501 Collins Avenue
Miami Beach 947-3417
GREETINGS TO ALL
CADiLLAC
HOTEL
Jtrry Granger, Owner-Mqt.
Luxurious accommodations,
low rates, plenty of fun!
532-4541
A Full Block On The Ocaen
39th to 40th Srs., Miami Beach
Sincere Wishes for a
HAPPY CHANUKA
COLONIAL INN
ON THE OCEAN
18101 Collins Avenue
947-4571
EMBASSY
HOTEL
Under New Ownership
ROSE & BEN ISRAEL
30th & Collins, Miami Beach
Tel. 538-2731
Florida Shores
Resort
Extends Good Wishes
for CHANUKA
On the Ocean at 94th Street
UN 5-3551 MIAMI BEACH
CHANUKA GREETINGS
CORONADO
MOTOR
MOTEL
Ft. Walton Beach, Florida
Ph. Cherry 3-8116
BEST WISHES for
CHANUKA
SEA
ISLE
Hotel
3001 Collins Avc.
To You I
>;
The
KOSHER HOTEL
of the Year!
. *-*#
The Air Conditioned and Hta'.tl
CiN C010N<
iirtiiuquf
tuedt Wished for a
tea
tjictppif Cmanuh
*r Hilda & Bernie Wieder
Rabbi & Mrs. Mayer I. Herman
Owner Mgmt.
ON THI ClkH U MtH SHUT, MIAMI ttACH __rZ\
- w
THE KORETSKY FAMILY
National Hotel
1677 COLLINS AVENUE JE 2-2311
MIAMI BEACH
BALMORAL HOTEL
9801 Collins Avenue & Ocean
EXTENDS TO ALL
HAPPY CHANUKA GREETINGS
MAYOR SHERWIN WINN, Vice President General Manager
"T
OASIS MOTEL & APTS.
6580 INDIAN CREEK DRIVE UN 5-9875
MIAMI BEACH
GEORGE MARGOLIS
HAPPY CHANUKA TO ALL
Happy Chanuka and Best Wishes to All
CONTINENTAL HOTEL
4000 COLLINS AVENUE JE 8-6721
BARRY HESSER, Manager

Page 10-D
Khwlsti fhrki/ain
Friday. December 3. 1966
May the Happiness of
This Festive Season
of
CHAN U KA
"The Feast of Candles"
Gladden the Hearts of All Jewry

GREETINGS TO ALL FROM
I III MVIMH.II III II IMM.
36 N.E. 1st Street Miami, Florida
Air-Conditioned Heated
O/FICE SPACE AVAILABLE BEST CENTRAL LOCATION
CALL
&f
-# Management Company
REALTORS
FR 1-3592 234 Biscayne Blvd. Miami, FU.
SINCERE WISHES FOR A HAPPY CHANUKA
Olli;\\S BAKERY
55 Washington Avenuo MIAMI REACH Pkano JE 6142
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
LUCILLE R. BRUNNER REALTOR
16348 W. Dixie Hwy. Wl 7-2567
Charles J. Uhlendorf
1154 Normandy Drive, Normandy Isle, Miami Beach, Florida
Tel. 864-2491
Best Chanuka Wishes
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Arbuz, Props.
Millar Heights, Sunniland Shop A 2239 Coral Way, Coral Gables
Phone 446-9330
HOLIDAY GREETINGS TO ALL
MIAMI MILITARY ACADEMY
10601 BISCAYNE BLVD.
TEL. 758-7648
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
BOB MOORE'S CRANE SERVICE
3147 N.W. North River Dr., Miami Telephone 634-0689
CHANUKA GREETINGS
NORTH. PADE WELDING
510 N.E. 16th St., No. Miami Beach
_________________________ttt_______
Phone Wl 7-5309
HOUDKY GREETINGS
Arthur K. rarrisli. I ..ill.. Realtor
Real Estate rnsqrance Property A^nagement
5111 S.W 8th Street, Miami, Florida 444-7301
1C !W
-A-*.
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
Pine wood Acres Private School
9500 S.W. 97th Avenue Miami, Florida
Vhone *71-32II
L-
Chanuka and the Pursuit of Peace
Continued from Page 2-D
can be determined, some three
hundred and forty-four minor
sorties. Would you call that the
pursuit of peace?
Guerilla Warfare
And what a war! It was a war
filled with "firsts" at least for
Judea. It may have been the first
time that a Jewish family ap-
peared as a unit to do battle.
And what kind of battle? The
first Greek phalanxes advancing
on right and left flanks, the first
catapults must have taught them
a fearful lesson and the first
Syrian mercenaries caught them
agonizingly unready. But, led by
his Maccabees, it took the Judean
only a few days to learn the use
of another first guerilla war-
fare.
"A rhythm of motion," Howard
Fast calls it. Allowing the enemy
neither pause nor rest, they
moved quickly, attacking the
rear, dispensing with armor and
breastplate, using the small
weapons of their youth, cutting,
ambushing, disappearing, hit and
run, attack and seek cover,
struggle and survive, until the
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
LWBHN
Electrolysis
Memb. Elect. Soc. of Amer.
25 YRS. EXPERIENCE
1150 NORMANDY DRIVE
Normandy Isle, Miami Beach
UN 5-0980 UN 4-5293
Happy Chanuka Greetings
REX
ART SUPPLIES
2263 S.W. 37th AVE.
(Douglas Rd.)
MIAMI, FLA.
Phone 445-1413
CHANUKA GREETINGS
ROMAN'S
Italian Foods
10995 BIRD ROAD
MIAMI
Phone 221-6311
Holiday Greetings from
J. F. FARLEY
CARPETS Restored to Their
Original Beauty with
Our Exclusive
Foley-Care Method
of Carpet Cleaning in
Your Home 5c a Sq. Ft.
For Free Estimate
Just Phone 624-2984
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
from
J. Wandembergh
Gives You PROMPT SERVICE
LAWN SAND MUCK
GRAVEL
- CALL 691-6077 -
whole of Judea was aroused and
the name of Mattathias and his
sons lit up the horizon.
The other "first" is the reason
they fought. This was, we are
told, the first recorded war for
religious freedom. Many nations
rose and fell in battles for what-
ever freedom it was they wanted
at the time, but none up to that
moment as far as we know, went
to war to preserve their religious
freedom. For most subjugated
people, staying alive was an
"idee fixe." If they preferred to
remain in one piece by accept-
ing the gods of their conquerors
with some faint hope of a "spit-
in-your-face*' tomorrow, who
could blame them? For Jews to
fight a long, enervating, bloody
war of resistance for an abstrac-
tion like religious freedom was
not only unreasonable and futile,
it was, in the eyes of the Greeks,
at least, downright silly. But the
Jews fought for freedom to do
and think about their God as
they wished and it turned out to
be quite a war. It brought the
people of Judea all the sorrow
and the horror, the witless de-
struction and pestilence that
come with war but at its bitter
Holiday Greetings to All
RUDY'S
Home Repair
Service 24 Hours
Emergency Service
for Homes and Businesses
No Job Too Big or Too Small
Free Advice & Estimates
PHONE 864-4353
Holiday Greetings to All
from
Golddust
Restaurant
7700 Biscayne Blvd.
Owners:
PAUL & JERRY SIEGEL
Holiday Greetings to All
from
Bramlett Co.
Designers & Contractors of
Food Service Equipment
6640 N.E. 4th COURT
751-6541
CHANUKA GREETINGS
SUPERSUB
SHOP
14615 W. Dijxie Hiway,
No. Miami 945-8242
And NEW Location
4580 S.W. 8th Street
443-1713
Holiday Greetings to All
from
>ii;xma\
I.AIUII >S
Specializing in Mexican Food
& Hebrew Wine
Open 10 A.M. to 12 P.M.
981 S.W. 8th STBKT
Photfe 374-9179
end the Greeks no longer looked
upon a Jew of Judea as a simple
scholar of the Book who would
rather die reading it than de-
fending his right to read it.
Man's Technocracy
So we know why the Jews
fought. What about the Greeks?
Even by the measuring standards
of the second century BCE the
show must have cost them a
fantastic figure in men. drach-
mas and time, to say nothing of
the interruption of trade routes.
However, let's not write the
Greeks off as stupid; the knew
what they were doing. It v as that
abstraction again. A war fought
by dedicated, committee fana-
tics for religious freedom the
Greeks couldn't let that continue.
The whole concept of trecdom
that little Judea was supporting
was a notion that could not be
allowed to survive for one single
moment in the Greek m >."ld or
in Greek thought. Judea wasn't
fighting only for its own free-
dom, but for the right of ill peo-
ples to be free and to i.ve ex-
pression to that freedom, and
fighting with a ferocity a-.d ex-
altation that gave the whole
HIST WISHES
from
Aerodex, he.
Aircraft Engines
Specialist
Miami International
Airport
887-0241
GREETINGS
LEE'S TACKLE,
Inc.
Established 1920
324 N.E. 13th STREET
Ph. 371-7804
MANUFACTURERS
RETAIL
Fishing Tackle Repairing
Marine Equipment
HAPPY CHANUKA
COME IN AND SEE
OUR HOLIDAY SPECIALS
AHIYS
BAKERY
Famous from Syracuse
To Miami
"ONCE TASTED -
NEVER WASTED
1360 NE 163rd STREET
Phone 947-4092
TO ALL GREETINGS
HOWELL WINDOW
SERVICE
SALES I SERVICE
New & Used Doors.
Windows & Screens
18320 So. Dixie Highway
Ph. 238-5102

'*T. wecemoer an 19KIT
Friday. December 9, 1966
terrible war the dimensions of a
morality play staged in the
amphitheatre of heaven.
These days, ideas sometimes
tend to become obscured by the
fog oi man's technocracy. I won-
*Jefvisti meridian
Page 1.1-D
dcr what would happen if a
Maccabee or two appeared on
the scene tomorrow. Would we
rally round them? Or would we
call them beatniks and arrest
them as trouble makers? I think
I know how we woujd react. We
would ask them to appear as part
of a panel for the next organiza-
tional meeting. Subject for dis-
cussion: Freedom. Is it Worth
Fighting For?
Jewish Schools in Germany Today
Continued from Pag* 3-D
pof 10 children for the second. As
ps the case everywhere in the fed-
eral province of Hesse, the chil-
[dren have 18 hours of lessons a
I week in their first school year and
| 22 hours in their second year.
In addition to this, there are
rthree hours of instruction in the
I Hebrew language. Although chil-
id re a of other denominations can
be accepted for the school, it was
* created principally to enable Jew-
, ish children to receive religious
j instruction, which is not a prac-
tical proposition in other schools
I because of the extremely small
[number of Jewish children in each
[individual school.
In the new Jewish elementary
[school, which is for the time be-
ing only intended for the first four
I years of schooling, the children
[learn "he Hebrew language. The
[schoo: is financed by the Frank-
fort Jewish community. The teach-
ing standard corresponds to that
of other elementary schools so
that, if they should wish to, the
pupils can transfer at any time to
other schools. The elementary
school is run by a Christian teach-
er, Frau Ruth Moritz, who was
released from other duties by the
provincial government expressly
for this post. The other teacher is
Fraulcin Burger, who came from
Israel to take up the appointment.
At the opening of the school,
the rabbi for the province of
Hesse, Dr. I. E. Lichtigfeld, said
that the school was an experi-
ment. "We do not want a lot of
fuss. The school is a delicate
seedling which still has to be
nurtured."
As in the former Frankfort Phil-
anthropinum, Christian and Jew-
ish children arc being taught to-
gether in the new Jewish elemen-
tary school for it, too, is in-
tended as a bridge between the
religious denominations.
The success of the Frankfort
Jewish school encouraged the
Munich Jewish community to set
up a Jewish elementary school,
too. The ceremonial opening took
place on Sept. 4. with a parents'
evening. The new school opened
its doors for the boys and girls
on Sept. 6. It is situated in the
I'rinzregentenstrasse in a building
which is the property of the Mun-
ich Jewish community. The school
is run by Frau Ocsterreich. as-
sisted by other qualified teaching
staff. Twenty four children have
so far been enrolled for the first
class.
For the present, it is the two
biggesl post-war Jewish commun-
ities in the Federal Republic of
Germany which have reactivated
the tradition of Jewish schools.
Chanuka Greetings
PUBLIC
GAS
CO.
5325 N.W. 77th Ave.
Ph. 887-0271
Miami, Florida
SERVING SOUTH FLORIDA
FOR OVER 25 YEARS
A HAPPY
CHANUKA
Kern Awning
Company
3520 N.W. 50th STREET
Phone NE 5-2065
GREETINGS
J. I W. PLUMBING
SERVICE, INC.
1222 NW 29th STREET
Phone NE 5-4435
Ten JayJim Washington
MIAMI, FLORIDA
CHANUKA GREETINGS
Strecker
Truck Body
Builders
Chcee.Skehan. Owner
724 N;W. 21st STREET
*
AND BEST WISHES TO THE
ENTIRE JEWISH COMMUNITY
SENATOR
Robert M. Haverfield
HOLIDAY GREETINGS TO ALL
I J CUBE'S TAKE OM T SES\ 14 E
Specializing in Barbecue Foods & Home-Made Pies
Hours 5 A.M. to 9 P.M.
1935 N.W. 62nd St.
Ph. 691-9436
HOLIDAY GREETINGS TO ALL
EQUIPMENT CITY RESTAURANT. SUPPLIES
Charles Fashik, Owner
1035 N. Miami Ave. Phono 374-4784
HOLIDAY GREETINGS TO ALL
Tirittt eft Twirl Beauty Salon
Rowena Wilson Sara Grundman
17028 Collins Ave. (Loews Shopping Canter), Miami Beach
HOLIDAY GREETINGS TO ALL
S & S STOVE REPAIR, INC.
Rebuilt Restaurant Ranges Buy & Sell
127 N.W. 5th St. Phone 3734542
HAPPY CHANUKA TO ALL
Quality China & Eqpt. Co., Inc.
Complete Installations Monty Nickas, Owner
841 N. Miami Ave. Phone 379-1826
Greetings to All Our Friends and Patrons
LATTA'S SANDWICH SHOP & RESTAURANT
Open 24 Hours Good Wholesome Food Reasonably Priced
700 N.W. 79th ST. AND 11901 N.W.7th AVE.
GREETINGS TO ALL OUR FRIENDS AND PATRONS
The JIM MCDONNELL'S
Andy Frain Service
?40 LINCOLN RD.. MIAMI H*CH
Phooa 532-4818
\ Q K 0 b l Jb 6
WE EXTEND TO THE ENTIRE
JEWISH COMMUNITY
BEST WISHES FOR
A VERY HAPPY CHANUKA
Publix Super Markets
"Where Shopping is a Pleasure"
HAPPY CHANUKA AND BEST WISHES TO ALL
DUBROW'S LINCOLN CAFETERIA
330 LINCOLN ROAD
MIAMI BEACH
i.HOIt MXTEMUOKS. I\i.
Custom Made Draperies & Spreads in Our Own Work Rooms
COMPUTE DECORATOR SERVICE
841 NE. 125th STREET NORTH MIAMI
TO ALL SEASON'S BEST WISHES .
Happy Chanuka and Best Wishes to All
INTERSTATE SCREW CORP.
RONALD SEIDEN, President
6760 N.W. 37th Ave.
OX 1-8700
CHANUKA GREETINGS
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF SOUTH MIAMI
5750 Sunset Drive South Miami, Fla.
F.D.I.C.
Member of Federal Reserve System
Holiday Greetings to all from BARBARA & HUNTER ROGERS
PETITE POODLE SALOONS
Free Pickup and Delivery
16350 BISCAYNE BLVD. 949-3758
9816 S. DIXIE HIGHWAY, KENDALL 665-7288

T-------
A TO ALLfc,
& BODYHOP, INC.
71
PhoM 757-9681
11 N.W/m COURT,.MlAJrTT
*
-i-
HAPPY fipPiNVKA TO ALL
WELL BILT^PRODUCTS. INC.
5561 N.W. 36th Avenue, Miami
Phone 635-5276
Best Wishes for the Chanuka Holiday
ALDORE ALUMINUM DOOR & METAL CO.
DIVISION Of ARCHITECTURAL GLASS PRODUCTS, INC.
4S75 N.W. 77th Ave. Phone 8SS-4661
Chanuka and the Unwritten Word
By I. J. MAGULIES
|T seefns to HH^wrifeVtfta^uhbut
twenty-five hundred years ago
the-Jews succumbed to some ma-
jor regression, a traumatic shock
resulting in a near total memory
loss. The amnesia that has ensued
since, with only vague instances
of partial recovery, remains for
the most part uninterrupted.
Since then, due to an increasing
reliance on the unwritten word,
events seem, if not clear, at least
sequentially logical. But the cycle
prior to this last one seems bur-
ied in a sea of unconsciousness
almost too murky and severe for
any hope of recovery- It is the sea
in which Leviathan sleeps. One of
his fins apparently twitched re-
cently, and admittedly the Dead
Sea Scrolls did float and bubble
to the top. This however is no in-
dication that he really means to
stir. Much less than he means to
awake.
Minus that lost body of mem-
ory the Jew, at best, is like an
amputee. At best he feels the
presence of an unremitting ab-
sence. This is what accounts for
the Jew's perennial bad con-
science. He is only half his
Holiday Greetings
RUE DE LA PAIX
BOUTIQUE
original hand made in sixes t-14
All our Clothing if H.nd Made
in Oar Shop Exclusive Designs.
If 15 PONCE DE LEON 81VD.
CORAL GABIES 445-9554
Holiday Greetings from
JOHN & DOROTHY ADAMS
Host & Hostess
JON'S STEAK HOUSE
and
JON'S PATIO PUB
(Now Open)
373 W. 9th St., Hialeah
Phone 888-5411
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
Art Lessons
by
CONNI GORDON
ART SCHOOL
Children and Adults
530 Lincoln Rd. Mall, MB.
Phone 532-1001
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
TRAIL
DECORATORS
Fine Reupholstering
MODERN OR
ANTIQUE FURNISHINGS
* Slipcovers Cushions
5410 S.W. 8th STREET
445-8396
HAPPY CHANUKA
TANMA'S
Reauty Shop
"The Smartest Salon
on Miami Beach"
Free Consultation with
Mr. Antoine for All
Hair Problems
1547 WASHINGTON AVE.
538-1923
image. It accounts for that con-
sist^qt-Jopk.of? deprivation.- a leek
even tma.muscular Sabras haven^t
quite managed te erase. It ac-
counts for his continual discom-
fort, because something should
be there, and what should be
there is not.
Chanuka is an excellent ex-
ample of that amnesia.
Day of Abomination
And what do we know of
Chanuka? We know it as the
Feast of Lights, as the annual
dedication of the Sanctuary. We
know it falls on the twenty-fifth
day of Kislev, corresponding to
the first day of the winter sol-
stice. We know it as the day of
sweeping from the Temple the
licentious Greek soldiery- We
know it as a day the observance
of the rituals was no longer held
a capital offense, and a day when
scrolls of the law were no longer
destroyed upon discovery.
We know it as a day of the
miraculous lights and as the day
of the seven sons who would not
scrape before a tyrant, and also
as the day when the bearded im-
age of the Olympian Jove was
removed from the altar of the
Temple, and the Temple was
rUansM^hafluWwe know. wV
"celebrite both as Victory and Di-
feat. Defeat, "in that on that da\
the Temple was scourged, and
Victory, in that on thaUday three
years later, the temple was re
stored.
But what do we know of Cha
nuka itself, the torgoiten original
Chanuka? What can we know of
it? We haven't even the faintest
notion of what the Sanctuary was
. the very sanctuary before
which the original lights of Cha
nuka were made to burn. There
are some scholastic clues. But
these hinder, not help, as the\
are considered under the very
nationalisms that make the Sane
tuary an unknowable, rational
isms that are the symptoms ol
the amnesia itself. In fact, so
far gone is that amnesia that we
haven't even the sensation of
what the Sanctuary might have
been. Not only have we lost the
"knowing," but what is worse,
perhaps we have even lost the
legitimacy of ever again possess
ing it. Of course there are some
negligible institutions in the bow
els of the unconscious that
stretch toward that knowledge.
Holiday Greetings
ARTHUR R. KINGSLEY CO.
|FHA Mortgages
TO BUY and SELL PROPERTY
Reasonable Discounts
8340 N.E. 2nd AVE.
First Federal Bldg., Suite 222
PL 4-3567
Free Parking in Rear
CHANUKA GREETINGS
from the
LEDERMAN
FAMILY
AUDREY, REUBEN, JAN,
DON and SUE
CHANUKA GREETINGS
from
Keeti's
Wesrchester Shopping Plaza'
8601 CORAY WAY
221-4211
9865 BIRD ROAD
221-3741
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
K/V/M/J.
KETCHES
Open 6 a.m. to 4 p.m.
BREAKFAST & LUNCH
9300 S. Dixie Highway
MR. & MRS. LOUIS SHERRY
of
LOUIS SHERRY
ASSOCIATES, INC.
Realtors
extend best wishes for a
Happy Chanuka to AU
1 LINCOLN RD. BLDG.
Phone 538-5433
Chanuka Greetings To All
ATLAS METAL
INDUSTRIES, INC.
259 W. 23rd STREET
HIALEAH, FLORIDA
Ph. 888-3411
JOSEPH SCHERER
& SONS, INC.
Along With Their
Employee's
Extend Greetings for a
Happy Chanuka To All
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
CENTRAL
LIGHTING FIXTURES
12607 N.W. 7th AVE.
Miami
MU 5-1514
BEST WISHES
FOR A
HAPPY CHANUKA
C. L. Clements
Insurance Agency, Inc.
IE 8-7403
1100 LINCOLN ROAD
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
FROM THE
C. IN. KISTLER
COMPANY
445-1441
1414 CORAL WAY
Lowest Monthly Paymenl in
This Area on Horn* Loans
LOWEST RATES
Mo Mortgage Inaur
Charge

rnaav. Deeen,h*r SOW
Friday, December 9, 1986
but these, too, are of only the
fuzziest scope.
Th Real Meanings
Chanukas real meaning is con-
sequently withheld from us. Not
only don't we know the Sanctu-
ary, but we don't know, the
Lights. Not only don't we know
the Lights, but we don't know
the Candelabra. Who indeed
knows the Candelabra that held
the flames of that first Feast of
Lights, lit first by Aaron? Which
of us can conceive the meaning
of the four fires, the white and
the red fire, the green fire and
the black fire through which vi-
sion Moses conceived the struc-
ture of that Candelabra? Do we
know what the fourfould division
is or the meaning of the se-
quence of its colors or what the
colors themselves signify? Are
the four fires correspondent to
the four letters of the unpro-
nounceable name? Are they cor-
respondent to the four rivers that
went forth from Paradise? Are
they the four- consecrated ani-
mals? Are they the four arch
angels, Michael, Gabriel, Uriel
and Raphael? Are they the four
worlds through which the Tree
of Life branches, Atziluth, Briah,
Yetzirah and, finally, Assiah?
Talmudic Legtnd
Is there any connection be-
tween these four and the sub-
sequent Talmudic legend of the
four who entered the Garden,
the Pardess, the Rabbis Ben Azai,
Ben Zoma, Elisha Ben Avuyah
and Akiba? For the most part
we assign such matters to the
convenient burial place.of leg-
end. We put "them In a book.
We dispose of them as imper-
ceptible fables, as primitive al-
legorizations solely of aesthetic
or imaginary import Poeticisms
we call them, segments of a de-
funct anthropology, but we ac-
*Jenisti fhridKan
Page 13-D
credit our unease to the natural
unfamiliarity that comes from
the presumed stretches of ma-
terial time that have elapsed be-
tween that THEN and this NOW.
If these are our excuses, then
obviously Greek Reason has had
the victory and the Temple is
still in its abomination. If it
weren't we should remember.
Chanuk. Dreidel
What, in the beginning, caused
this forgetting and initiated this
cessation of comprehensions, is
of course now impossible even to
surmise. Since Adam and Eve
there seems to have been a con-
tinual series of these memory
lapses. The Loss of Paradise was
ostensibly the first in this series.
Babel and the Flood were of
course the beginning and end of
a similar amnesia attack. Those
who like such matters for specu-
lation concur that the last of this
series of dimunitions occurred at
the destruction of the Temple
and the consequent Exile, when
the Shechina withdrew its pres-
ence, and in replacement left our
minds with a clouded and inferi-
or order of knowing, an order of
knowing, dull and crass.
Since that transposition we
have learned to trace satellites
but the source of the four fires
we cannot trace.
But hope there is. If trees can
be made to sprout through the
desert, and Ben-Gurion can evade
grenades, which require only
simple acts of magic, then, with
a bit more practice we might
finally avail ourselves of the
Isaiahic visions we were prom-
ised. Mass shock therapy may
prove prerequisite to such an
event, if it is to undo our present
state of coma. Evidence abounds
that the shock might be all too
imminent. At least there is
rumor to that effect in the dailv
- HOLIDAY GREETINGS
CHANUKA Your FIGURE Problem
GREETINGS Is NO PROBLEM to the
EDWARD PERFECT
GORSET SHOP
1755 SW 8th STREET
TAIT Miami, Florida
FR 9-9837
HOLIDAY GREETINGS MR. IE0 CIMENT
f MM
Jimmy's
GULF Service Station DIXIE PICTURE FRAME CO.
Open 24-Hrv A Day EXTENDS
CHANUKA GREETINGS
1725 Nf 79th ST.
(CAUffWAY) to All His Friends and Patrons
NORTH BAY VILLAGE
460 W. 18th STREET
Mien* UN 5-9268 Hlaleah
JIMMY VARRONE
Phone TU 5-1454
to au ... an times M. CAMUS
! ROOFING
Since 1921
BAKER PHARMACY LICENSED INSURED
PRESCRIPTION SPECIALISTS
2701 N.W. 1st Avenue
Mmm TU 8-99*3 MIAMI
480 MUM AVfNttf Phone 374-5829
MIAIEAH, FLORIDA

--
press. Judging from the cold
fires by which the cold war is
being waged, one might wisely
plan for it in the very nearest
of immediacies. Difficult it is
of course knowing whether to
look forward to that event with
utter trepidation or with utter
thankfulness. There is an oral
tradition that the emotion sus-
tained at that ultimate moment
may have much to do with the
immediate condition following it,
in whatever world.
However, the Shechina may in
fact return any midnight, espe-
cially as the Shechina and the
Moon are often identified as par-
tially coterminous, and as it is
to the Moon that our projective
fancies now lead. Then will our
Chanuka dreidels spin in a total-
ly anti-gravitational space, and
its celebration now, is not there-
fore the worst of ambitions.
There is always the possibility
that THERE the meaning of the
four fires, plus several hundred
thousand more items like them,
may become clear again. And
who knows who may greet us
at her gate? There is also a
tradition that her gates, like the
openings in the body, are nine
in number, since the Moon is
Yesod or Foundation, and also
representative of the bodily Cor-
pus. At any rate, extraordinary
things seem always to be hap-
cning in its light.
If we are very lucky, and if
the demons can no longer contain
themselves at their governmental
games, we may attend that
celebration there in our own
generation. The transition may
come via a multitude of possi-
bilities. An illuminating bolt, in
the mushrooming proportions
of the phallus, may be the ve-
hicle of transport. A simultan-
eous bolt on Israel and New
York may assure the Jews abso-
lute prior passage. The planet
thereafter may decimate as a
result, but then, on the other
hand, think of how good our
chances of learning the original
meaning of Chanuka will be.
They will be better than at any
time since Sinai was lifted over
our mutual heads and our utter
destruction threatened at a
stroke.
As for the get-away ship, by
which the going will be gone ...
measly Sputnik and her succes-
sors notwithstanding ... let us
say this: for those who want the
information, who want the tech-
niques to build it, so as to prop-
erly connect Adamah and Lev-
anah, let them go to Safed. There
are books there, somewhere, in
which the information is down
to the last ahair.
At any rate rid yourself of
your worldly worries. They are
due entirely to those foul fetid
Greek logistics. Cleanse the Tem-
ple in your brain and prepare
for visions. And in doing so, may
this be the happiest Chanuka
you've had.
\\m\
i
Chanuka
Greetings.
from the Staff
of
UJVCG
SOUTH AORIDA'S GOOD MUSK STATIONS
AM 1080 KC. 10,000 Watts
FM -105.1 MC. -160,000 Watts
ii
. /.'

Page 14-D
+Jt>wif*fhrknan
Friday, December 9. 1966
View of Chanuka for Suburbanite
Continued from Page 8-D
cation and this is a significant
time to dedicate our new quar-
ters."
In middle class 'Colonial"
Westfield, which is considered
the bedroom of New York City
because it is so close and so
residential, it is not hard to
locate a Jewish house. Most of
the Christian homes are deco-
rated with lights and scenes that
make the eye marvel at what
man can do with the electric
bulb. In some areas of town, the
single Jewish house on the street
stands out.
Mrs. Herbert Seidel, a leader
of Hadassah here, doesn't put an
electric menorah in the window,
but some Jewish families do.
The Seidels, who live in next-
door Mountainside. N.J., usually
invite another neighborhood Jew-
ish family to their home. The
two families light the candles;
give the children gifts and serve
holiday delicacies. She said their
celebrations' give them all pride
and strength within the atnio-
sphere of a Jewish home.
All the groups in town hold
Chanuka parties and Hadassah
has some interesting one. They
might present a "Yemenite Chan-
uka"' program or "Chanuka
Songs." with records, of course.
Family Services
At Temple Emanu-El, which is
the only synagogue in town and
vhich is Reform with traditional
leanings, there will be Chanuka
family services on Friday night.
And this year the children will
perform with songs they learned
in their junior choir
B'nai 11 nth again will hold a
Chanuka party. In the past this
group has held parties for their
members and children and in the
last few years has increased the
Jewish content of the program.
Some of the parties of course
may be a little too social in na-
ture. But some place along the
line, the rabbi and other Jewish
community leaders somehow try
to get across the spiritual mes-
sage of Chanuka: "In celebrating
Chanuka," said Rabbi Kroloff,
"we celebrate the courage of the
Maccabees who refused to violate
their Jewish faith, who refused
to act as pagans and at the same
Holiday Greetings from
NORTH MIAMI BEACH
FURNITURE CO.
We Rent Rollaway Beds
and Baby Furniture
If You Have Good
Furniture to Sell, Call
PHONE WI 7-3169
15320 W. Dixie Hwy.
No. Miami Beacb
Mrs. Van Gundy, New Owner
A Happy Chanuka To All
Dean Cleaners
A Laundry
13*10 N.W. 7th AVENUE
NORTH MIAMI
hen* MU a-9288
Elias Thaw
time showed what a small group
of people can do in defense of
principles they believe in."
Rabbi Kroloff conducts a
Chanuka workshop with mem-
bers of the Temple Sisterhood.
He'll go over the Chanuka bless-
ings. He also talks about the re-
lation of Chanuka and Christmas
and an approach for the Jew to
behave during the season, and of
course he stresses the meaning
of Chanuka.
Not Entirely Committed
Westfield, with a total popula-
tion of more than 30.000, is not
the most-committed nor is it the
least-committed Jewish commun-
ity for a suburban town. And
there mav be Jews in town who
have Christmas trees in their
homes. Interestingly, everyone
assumes there are Jews who have
trees in their homes but nobody
knows anyone who docs.
And like some other commun-
ities, the Westfield Jewish Corn-,
munity always has a reaction to
the Christmas celebrations in the
public schools. Westfield High
School, for instance, has a Christ-
mas pageant which is "very re-
ligious in nature"
Thus, Westfield Jewry pre-
pares for Chanuka. The activities
are many. And though you don't
hear the words, "Jewish sur-
vival," it becomes evident that
this community like others be-
lieves that in the suburbs you
have to celebrate a holiday to
its fullest.
A Happy Chanuka To All
Marine Engine Overhaul
and Installation
Distributors
Universal Marine Engines
Crusader Marine Engines
both Gas and Diesel
MIAMI MARINE
ENGINEERS, INC.
418 S.W. 2nd AVENUE
Miami 36, Florida
C. 4. Lauter
Telephone 373-6669
HAPPY CHANUKA
\E\YPORT
snor
2347 Coral Way
Miami 45, Fla.
Call 446-1481
je\ the best
0 iff recipe
j?nw tor
gftyoikt
__ newly
^^E-^l l moved
to GREATER MIAMI
Taba one phona cell (or coupes
below), add hostess with bsfketa
of gift* and information about the
city, stir ia lenumt hospitality,
and you'll havo a fentroui ind
daNihtfui wtlcomt. Just phone
GREETINGS to the
RABBIS and MEMBERS
of
CONGREGATION
B'NAI SHOIOM
from
eliidcl Mori
COMPLIMENTS OF
NYLON
EXTERMINATORS
270 N.E. 21st St.
FR 1-6904
SINCERE WISHES
TO
ALL MY
JEWISH FRIENDS
J. FRANK McCRACKEN
Clerk of Criminal
Court
443-2526
HtseMtae la M as Imih'i
J f leese hove tfce Welcome Woeen
Hostess coll ea me.
] I would like to subscribe to
The Jewish Meridian.
Fill out coupon sad mall to
Circulation Deet.,
M.P.0. Bex 2973, Miomi, Fla.
ANSWERITE
TELEPHONE ANSWERING SERVICE
FR 3-2666 JE 8-0721
YOU GET MORE CALLS WHEN YOUR PHONE IS
ANSWERED RITE
MODERATE RATES 24-HOUR SERVICE
Serving
JEFFERSON HIGHLAND MURRAY UNION
FRANKLIN PLAZA NEWTON
MAN THAT Z\P,C0PE REALLY
SENDS ME...
>
HMM
wmmmmmmmmtmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm
OFFICES OF DISTINCTION by PAVLOW
Office designs
and furnishings
direct from manufacturer
Desks, Chairs,
Sofas, Credenzas,
Lamps, Everything
for the Office of Distinction
pavLnwi
Interior doston snd
specs planning.
Open Saturday Morning
)
PAVLOW OFFICE FURNITURE, Inc.
?Mi Southweit 31st Avenue
M jm/, Florid
Telophonc HlghlanJ 4.-8221
SOUND OF STEREO
1,000
STEREO
FM_\ 94.9
!*!9 HOURS
SPECIALLY PROGRAMMED
SHOWS
Every Sunday -
4:05-5:00 P.M. MUSIC AROUND THE WORLD
5:05-7:00 P.M. CLASSICS IN STEREO
7:05-8:00 P.M. "BUT NOT FORGOTTEN"
8:05-9:00 P.M.-'PREMIERE"- "KiJEff0
! ON ALL 94.9 FM DIALS
DON'T MISS IT THIS SUNDAY

ANSWERITE
TELEPHONE ANSWERING
SERVICE
Serving
JIFFERS0N UNION
HIGHLAND FRANKtW
MURRAY PLAZA
NEWTON
FR 3-5581
YOMR
TELEPHONE
PROPERLY ANSWERED
IS YOUR GREATEST
BUSINESS ASSET
WttaiM Who* Mernatlontl, vrifk
w 5,000 hostoue*. Dm mtr
than thirty wan-. tga
fotlanng good-Wr" ht bwkust m4
community IRs. For MTt Worm-
tba gbeiil...
wa
443-2526
inOCOM RIWCOMEMI
w tatoMoaM la let as aw yee'ie
an.
Please have the Welcome Wagon
Hostjss call on me.
1 would like to subscribe to
The Jewish Floridian.
'ill out coupon and mail to
Circulation Dept..
M.r\0. Box 2973, Miami, Fl.
*. kn'islb mrnldtfrtr
Page 15-D
BfiWIO
BY HENRY LEONARD
Ylh^lii^
I
'It's the Annual Menorah for lighting,
the White House Lawn!"
Cop/. 1966, Da.enu PfodbCfient
LEGAL NOTICE
IN THE CIRCUITCOURT OF THE
ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
OF FLORIDA IN AND FOR
DADE COUNTY, IN CHANCERY
No. 66C12712
NOTICE OF SUIT
the VYILLIAMSBURUH
SAVINGS BANK
Plaintiff,
V*
JOHN .I I .a FONTAINE, (I ux.
Defendants.
TO: .I'llin .1. LaFontaine and
Bonnie LaFontaine, his wife,
I 1 IT .lanis Avenue
Akron, Ohio
v. hi are hereby notified thai the
above captloned notion has been to*
stRuted against you in the Circuit
Court of ih.- Eleventh Judicial Cir-
cuit of Florida In and for Dade Coun-
ty to foreclose a mortgage upon the
following described real property:
l.oi IS Block .VI CORAL PARK
ESTATES SECTION .".. according
to the Plal thereof, recorded In
Plat Book 88 Page 94 of the Pub-
lie Records of Dado County. Flor-
ida.
You are required to file a respon-
sive pleading to the plaintiff-, com-
plain) with the Clerk of the aforesaid
court, and serve u copy thereof upon
plaintiff* attorney. MARTIN KINK,
I >ad.' Fednral ItUikMng, Miami. Flor-
i
soth, I 966, .i i ieai '- Pro Con
ill be ntered against you
DATED November -< I960,
. i: II LEATHERMAN
Clerk ol the Circuit Court
Bj C P. col'ELAXD
1'eputy Cli rk
UARTTN KINK
Dade Ked< ral Building
Miami. Florida, 33181 12/2-9-16-23
ATTENTION
ATTORNEYS.
+Jenist) FfiuridTifn
solicits your legal notice*.
W* appreciate youi
patronage and guarantee
accurate eerrlce at legal
Dial FR 3-46tl
lor messenger m ike
LEGAL NOTICF
LEGAL NOTICE
ATTENTION!
Jewish Home for the Aged
THRIFT SHOP
NEEDS YOUR DONATION
NOW!
"FURNITURE"-"APPLIANCES"
"CL0THING"-"JEWELRY," etc.
"All Items Tax Deductible"
CALL 696-2101
notified and re-
ally claims and
IN THE COUNTY JUDGE'S COURT
IN AND FOR DADE COUNTY,
FLORIDA. IN PROBATE
No. 71953-B
' In RE: Estate of
TOSSIE MAE LAWRENCE
B k/a MAXINE LAWRENCE
B k/a MRS. JOHN C. LAWRENCE
I i eased,
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
To All i Iredltora and All Pi
Having Claims or Demands Against
I Said Estate:
"ou art- hereby
quired to present
I demands which you may nave against
the estate of TOSSIE MAP, law-
RENOE a/k a MAXINE LA WRENCH
! a k/a MRS. JOHN i LAWRENCE
deceased late of Dad.- County. Flor-
ida, to the County Judges of Dade
County, and file the name in dupli-
cate an.i as provided In Section 738.18,
Florin.i Statutes, in their offices In
the County t'onrthiiusf in Dade
County, Florida, within six calendar
months from the time of the firs!
Publication hereof, or th.- sail., will
b barred.
Dated at Miami, Florida, tin :'jth
(Uy ol November, A.I> 1966)
HARRY H. SMITH
As Administrator
First publication of thin notice on
tfte 2nd da> of D.-vmber, 1S66.
SAMl El. S. SMITH
Attorney tor Administrator
?> Ian, oil. Road
j_________________________12/2-9-18-33
tr* THE COUNTY JUDGE'S COURT
IN AMD FOR DADE COUNTY,
FLOfWDA, IN PROBATE:
No. 72895
n RK Batata ol
INK/. G lUCHMANN.
Dec... .i.
NOTICE- TO CREDITORS
To Ail Creditors .mil All Persons
' I lav mi: Claims or Demands Against
bai.l Estate:
. Ybu arc hereby notified and re-
quired to present any claims and
demands which jou may have against
the estate of INEZ (J. KICH.MANN
Bee eased late of Dade County, Flor-
ida, to the County Judges of Dade
County, and file the same in dupli-
cate and as provided in Section 733.16.
1 i.n Ida Statutes, in their offices in
the County Courthouse In Dade
County, Florida, within six calendar
months from the time of the first
publication hereof, or the same will
l,e barred.
Dated at Miami, Florida, this 30th
day of .November, A.D. 1964.
J CASPER (1KYER
As Executor
First publication of this notice on
the 2nd day of December, 196ti.
MANUEL I.UBEL
Attorney for Kxecutor
101 East Flagler Street
12/2-9-16-23
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE UNDER
FICTITIOUS NAME LAW
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN thai
the undersigned, desiring to engage
in business under the fictitious italic
of MR. "K" at I6SJ Michigan Avenue,
Miami Beach, Florida, Intends t<> reg-
ister said name with the Clerk of
th.- circuit Court of Dade County,
Florida
EVELINE K ennard. I
tSOTTH VRDT, CHRISTIE A
SHEPA HII
Attorneys for Eveline Kennard,
Owner
11/211 i- .
IN THE COUNTY JUDGE'S COURT
IN AND FOR DADE COUNTY,
FLORIDA, IN PROBATE
No. 7SMM-B
In RE: Estate of
PAUL GROW,
Deceased
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
To All Creditors and All Persons
Having Claims or Demaade Against
Said Estate:
You are hereby notified and re-
quired to present any claims and
demands whleh- you- roaiy have against
the estate, of PAUL GROW, deceased
late of IXade County. Florida, to the
County Judges of Dade County, and
file the same In duplicate and as pro-
vided in Section 733.16. Florla Stat-
utes, in their offices in the County
Courthouse, in Ihtdo County. Florida,
within six calendar months from the
time of the first publication hereof,
or the same will be barred.
Dated at Miami, Florida, this 23rd
day of November, A.D. 1966
JOSH RBPHUN
As Executor
First publication of this notice on
the Snd dav of December, 1966
JOSH RKI'HIIN
Attorney for Executor
1370 Washington Avenue p ._,,_,,._,
IN THE COUNTY JUDGE'S COURT
IN AND FOR DADE COUNTY,
FLORIDA,- IN PROBATE
No. 72885-B
In RE ftetati ol
EDITH SEARLE T< >KST.\D,
. EDITH S, TOK8TAO
i', < < asi d.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
To All Creditors and All Pi
Having Claims or Demands: Against
Said Bsl ite
You are hereby notified and re-
quired to present any claims and
demands .vhnr. you may have against
th. -., of EDITH SEARLE TOK-
STAI>, a k/a EDITH 8, T< K-
d UUo j Ml I 'ouiit..-, Flor-
ida, to, the county Judge*. Dads
County, and file the same in
cate and, as provided ,u Seotlon
Florid* statute*. In theii
the iviuaty Courtnouse ,a Dade
CoJiity, >1ortda. within six calendar
months frois 'i..- lime oi tli>- first
publication hereof or the same
he bai .
Dal d al Miami, Florida, this L5tl
day of November, A.D. I98(
SANFORD .- PAUNCE
As Executor
FAUNCE, FINK & PORMAN
Attorneys for Executoi
IjOJ Congress Building, Miami. Pla.
.
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE
ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
IN AND FOR DADE COUNTY,
FLORIDA. IN CHANCERY
No. 6SC12235.
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION
MARIA ELENA Itos de OONEALEZ,
Plaintiff,
Vs
ANDRES ALBERTO GONZALEZ,
lief em
TO: ANDRES ALBERTO GONZALEZ
Calle 8 #."60 (altos) entre 21 y 2.",
Vedado, Habana
CUBA
YOU \i:i; HEREBY notified that
a Com plaint for Divorce has been
filed agalnel you, and you are here-
bj r.
answer to the Complaint on the Plain-
tiff's attorney, LESTER ROGERS,
wl..... address is KM N.w. nth Street,
Miami. Florida, and file the original
of the Answer In the office of the
Clerk of the Eleventh Judicial Cir-
cuit in and for Had. County. Flor-
ida, on or before the 2Srd dav of
December, IM6, In default of which
the cm.piaint win be tali a> on-
fesai d by von.
DATED this 14th day of N
bed, 1966,
I-: B LEATHERMAN
Clerk of the Cumuli Com t
By K M I.Y.MAN
Deput) Clerk
11/18-2" 12 2-8
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE
ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
OF FLORIDA IN AND FOR
DADE COUNTY. IN CHANCERY
No. 66C 12016 (Schulz)
NOTICE OF INTENTION TO APPLY
FOR CHANGE OF NAME
IN RE PBTITKTN "Pi
RICHARD '. LAN KWATCHEB
Notici Is hereb ven that RICH-
ARD ai.an K WATCHER, vhose
11 Id.....- 1440 Normandy
privet Man: .av.li. Florida, intends
to appli to one ot ihe Judges of the
Eleventh Judicial f'ircult, In And For
hade County, Florida, at his office
iMhoasc. al 9 10
c, do, k A M on th* !'ith day of
Deoember soon then-after
as he may be.heard, for an Order
changing his name from uichaiui
ALAN KWATCrotR to RICHARD
AI.AN COItBIN.
DATED: At Miaini, I 'nde County,
Florida, this 9th day of November
I960
EDWARD WALTERMAN
Attorney for Petitioner
van Blscayne BuUdlng
19 W. Flagler Street
Miami. Florida 33130
11/18-25 '
IN THE COUNTY JUDGE'S COURT
IN AND FOR DADE COUNTY,
FLORIDA, IN PROBATE
No. 71751-C
in RE: Estate of
ILVRRY HKLFORD
Deceased.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
To All Creditors and All Persons
Having Claims or Demands Against
snd Estate:
You are her*"by notified and re-
quired to present any claims and
demands which you may have against
the estate of HARRY BEDFORD, de-
ceased late of Dade County, Florida,
to the County Judges of Dado Coun-
ty, and file the same In duplicate and
as provided in Section 73:'.. 16, Flor-
la Statutes, In their offices in the
County Courthouse in Dade (bounty,
Florida, within six calendar months
from the time of the first publication
hereof, or the same will be barred.
Dated at Miami, Florida, this 11th
day of November, A.D. 1966.
CHARLOTTE FURMAN
As Executrix
First publication of this notice on
the 18th day of. November, 1966.
HARRY ZUKBRNtOK
Attorney for Executrix
430 Lincoln Road. Miami Beach
ll/W-25 12/2-9
NOTICE UNDEFt
FICTITIOUS NAME LAW
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that
the undersigned, desiring to engage
In business under the fictitious names
of STATE PROTECTION SERVICE;
INTER- AMERICAN BUSINESS
S.OBNCY, at 100 S. Blscayne Blvd ,
First National Bank of Miami Hide..
Miami. Fla. 33131, intends to register
-ai l names with the clerk of the
circuit Court of Dade County. Floc-
ida.
.ii >HN \". ADAMS
MARVIN I, LE8BNE
Attorney for AppU
SOS Bit I illdlng
\-2 2-9-16-23
GELB
MONUMENTS INC.
Open Every Doy Clottd Sabbath
140 SW 57th Ave. MO 1-8583
Miami's Only Strictly J*'lh
monument Dealer
NOTICE UNDER
FICTITIOUS NAME LAW
NoncR is m rbb> im :n i
in bui ":""'
. .-. PROPER riES
n, Mian
Florid reglstei said name
Ciri in Curt of

y, INC Floi Ida Corpor il
: -
1-, 2-8
NOTICE UNDER
FICTITIOUS NAME LAW
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that
th ii- der !. desiring to encage
under the Mctltioui
\-ri.E OF I'.iltAI.
G VBLES al I Douglas Road, Coral
Intends to r
said name with the Clerk of the dr-
ill Cnurl of Daile County, Florida.
FRANKS-GEORGE, INC .
a Fi irida corporation,
By: KENNETH FRANKS
As President
ALLEN KORNBLUM
\ for Applicants
:. Flagler Street, Miami, Fla.
c 25 12 --t'-18
NOTICE UNDER
FICTITIOUS NAME LAW
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that
the undersigned, desiring fo engage
ti business under the fictitious name
Of HARRY J, DELL ASSOCIATES
al 3665 N.W, 7th Si-,.1. Miami, Flor-
ida :::',U',. Im.....I- to register said
name with the Cli k of Ihe circuit
Court of 11 County, Florida.
FOREIGN M VRKKT SERVICES,
INC
Bs H \RRY I DELL
WILLIAM I LDWORN
An, i ni s for
Foreign Market Services, Inc.
n 'is--::, i!
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE
ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
OF FLORIDA IN AND FOR
DADE COUNTY, IN CHANCERY
No. 66C12138
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION
MARY LAWS' 'N,
Plaintiff.
vs.
JOHN c LAWSON,
Defendant
TO: JOHN C. I.AWSON
Residence Unknown
Yi.C ARK HEREBY NOTIFIED
that a Complaint for Divorce has
been filed acainst you and you are
required to file your answer thereto
with the Clerk of this Court and
serve a copy upon Plaintiffs Attor-
ney, MAX P, E3NGEL, 1700 N W 7th
Street, Miami, Florida on or before
the 20th day of December, 1966, Ifle
a Decree Pro Confesso will be en-
tered against you.
Dated this 10th day of Nov. n her.
1966.
E. B. LEATHERMAN
Clerk of the Circuit Court
By K. M. LYMAN
Deputy Clerk
ENCKL AND POLLACK
Attorneys for Plaintiff
1700 N.W. 7th Street
Miami, Florida
By MAX P. ENOEL
1V1*-2C '- ""
IN THE COUNTY JUDOE'S COURT
IN- AND FOR DADE COUNTY,
FLORIDA, IN PROBATE
No. 72983C
In RE: Estate of
MINNIE PARKASH
Deceased.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
To All Creditors and All Persons
Having Claims or Demands Against
Said Estate:
You are hereby notified and re-
quired to present any claims and
demands which vou may have, against
the estate of MINN IK FA RK A SI I
,1......i-.-d la!.- of Dade County. Flor-
ida, to the County Judges of Datdc
County, and file the sain, in dupli-
ind as provided In Section 7:t::.16.
Statutes. In th.-ir offices In
the C house In J Mule < 'onn -
i\. Florid i. within v calei dai
month- the time of tt,.- flrsi
.....r 11" same ill
i- barred i
Dated il I .real Nee*! N Y thU
l'.iih da) ol Nc .ml" i. \ I 1968,
MILTON SHKRR
\- \,i.....isirntor
i publication of this nl Ii or
the 2nd dai of i lecember. Il
SMITH a M vM >LER
i Inistrntor
107 Lit K
il
8/2-9
NOTICE OF SUIT
OR
ORDER OF PUBLICATION
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE
ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
OF FLORIDA IN AND FOR
DADE COUNTY. IN CHANCERY
No. 66C12689
SUIT FOR DIVORCE
CH VRLOTTE W VSKERMAN,
::tiff.
VS
HARRY WASSERMAN,
1'. f.-ndant.
TO: HARRY WASSERMAN
1 138 (loldl r. c .
M:i) fi. id II. Ights, Ohio
YOU, HARRY WASHERMAN, are
hi : bj notified that a Hill of I
plaint fir Divor a has been I Ii I
against you, and you are required to
serve a cpy l your Answer or Plead-
ing to the Bill of Complaint on Plain-
tiffs attorn.;.- CAIDIN, ROTHEN-
BERO, LELCHI'K & SUSSMAN, 805
Blscayne Building, Miami. Florida,
and file the original Answer or Pli ad
inn in the office of the Clerk of the
court on or before the 30tii
day of December, 1H66. if you fall to
do so. jlldinn-lit by default v\ ill h
tak.-n against you for the relief de-
manded In the Hill of Complaint.
DONE and ORDERED at Miami
Florida, this :>.ri day of Novemoi i
1966.
E. P. LEATHERMAN
Clerk. Circuit Court
Dadi County, Florida
(Seal) Bi K M. LYMAN
Deputy Clerk
c; :'-
NOTICE UNDER
FICTITIOUS NAME LAW
NOTCE IS HEREBY GIVEN that
the undersigned, desiring to engage
In business under the fictions names
of DKSTEX DRY-CLKANKR. DKS-
TEX SHAMPOO, DKSTEX
MOTH-KIIJ.ER & DRY CLEANER.
at 7540 N.W. 2L'nd Ave., Miami. Flor
Ida. Intends to register said names
with the Clerk of the circuit Court
of Dade County. Florida.
ROBERT CABTORO
11/2." IS 2-9-16
NOTrCE BY PUBLICATION
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE
ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
IN AND FOR DAOE COUNTY,
FLORIDA, IN CHANCERY
No. 6SC12508
SUIT FOR DIVORCE
JOSE LOPEZ-TRIOO
Plaintiff.
CARMENLOPEZ-TRIOO
Defendant
To: CARMEN LOPEZ-TRIOO
S12E 97 street Apt. 4F
Reiro Park. New fork
YOU ARE HEREBY N'i iTIFIKD
that a-BIH of Complaint for Divorce
has been filed against you and you
ore required t<> fil-- an Answer or
Plead rag with the Clerk of this Court
and to serve -< oopy on jack L.
KING. Attorn.i for Plaintiff, Suite
215. ii"." S.W l St. Miami. Florida,
on or before the 30th day of I h
h.-r, I960 or a default s!it;i be
tered Rgainsl vou
Tins Ni' I'h 'i: -'i ill' i
on.e each wei nsecul ve
weeks In Th- Ji
Di >NE and Ilaml,
Dade County, F |
ol No> ember,
i: i: I. N
i'.. i k :' the Circuit
Dade County, Ploi Ida
B) K M LYMAN
I tepul. i llerk
.i v K R N
- \
Mian
373-1607 11 .